Many in the W3C community — including staff, chairs, and Member representatives — present W3C work at conferences and other events. Below you will find a list some of the talks. All material is copyright of the author, except where otherwise noted.
the W3C standards process and web fonts
by Chris Lilley
Los Angeles, USA
Relevant technology areas: Browsers and Other Agents and Web Design and Applications.
what is WOFF and how does it work?
by Tal Leming and Erik van Blokland
Los Angeles, USA
Relevant technology areas: Browsers and Other Agents and Web Design and Applications.
All Good Things Come in Threes: A Tale of Three Screens
by Alex Danilo
Paris, France
Relevant technology area: Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
כלים ושיטות להנגשת אתרי אינטרנט (Tools and practices for web accessibility )
by Eyal Sela
וורדקמפ 2010
(Wordcamp 2010)
Jerusalem, Israel
Relevant technology area: Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
by Chris Lilley
Paris, France
Relevant technology areas: Browsers and Other Agents and Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
Implementing WCAG 2.0 (Webcast)
Citizens With Disabilities - Ontario
Ontario, Canada
Relevant technology area: Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
Native Apps vs Mobile Web panel (panel)
by Matt Womer
San Francisco, USA
Relevant technology area: Web of Devices.
Towards Video on the Web with HTML5
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Relevant technology area: Web of Devices.
by Klaus Birkenbihl, in cooperation with the Germany and Austria Office
W3C-Tag
(W3C Day)
Berlin, Germany
Relevant technology area: Semantic Web.
(see abstract)
At the Intersection of The Web and Augmented Reality: an Interesting Point
by Matt Womer
San Francisco, USA
Relevant technology areas: Web of Devices, Browsers and Other Agents, and Web Design and Applications.
Extensible Multimodal Annotation for Intelligent Virtual Agents
by Deborah Dahl
10th International Conference on Intelligent Virtual Agents
Philadelphia, USA
Relevant technology area: Web of Devices.
(see abstract)
Mobile 2.0: Browsers (panel)
by Matt Womer
San Francisco, USA
Relevant technology areas: Web of Devices, Browsers and Other Agents, and Web Design and Applications.
HTML5 & CSS3 - nytt lyft för webben (HTML5 & CSS3 - new power to the web)
by Olle Olsson
DFS Seminarium
(DFS Seminar)
Göteborg, Sweden
Relevant technology area: Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
Privacy...going, going, gone? (panel)
Brisbane, Australia
Relevant technology area: Semantic Web.
(see abstract)
An introduction to the HTML5 Platform
Cambridge, MA, USA
Relevant technology areas: Browsers and Other Agents and Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
Privacy Awareness: Icons and Expression for Social Networks
Virtual Goods + ODRL Workshop 2010
Namur, Belgium
Relevant technology area: Semantic Web.
HTML5 Redux with Philippe Le Hegaret
New York, NY, USA
(see abstract)
Changing the Mobile Landscape: From Apps to AR, Standards at W3C
by Matt Womer
CTIA: Mobile Web and Apps World Forum
San Francisco, USA
Relevant technology areas: Web of Devices and Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
How does the Semantic Web Work?
by Ivan Herman
1. DGI-Konferenz, 62. DGI Jahrestagung: Semantic Web & Linked Data
(1st DGI Conference and 62nd DGI Days: Semantic Web & Linked Data)
Frankfurt, Germany
Relevant technology area: Semantic Web.
(see abstract)
Integration of the huge amount of data accessible on the Web is one of the major challenges of the coming years. The goal of the Semantic Web is to provide a set of technologies to achieve this type of integration, i.e., to be able to develop applications that can quickly and reliably mash up different datasets, and do that based on standard technologies as opposed to ad-hoc and site specific approaches.
This presentation uses a very simple (and, of course, a bit artificial...) example from the book publication world to show how the goal of data integration can be achieved using Semantic Web technologies. Without going into technical details, the roles of a unified data format (i.e., RDF), of vocabularies, and of queries are presented. The goal is not to give a thorough description of any particular technology but rather to give a feel of what the Semantic Web technologies aim to achieve and how, and to generate further discussions.
HTML5 & CSS3 - nytt lyft för webben (HTML5 & CSS3 - new power to the web)
by Olle Olsson
DFS Seminarium
(DFS Seminar)
Linköping, Sweden
Relevant technology area: Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
Towards Video on the Web with HTML5
Barcelona, Spain
Relevant technology area: Web Design and Applications.
HTML5 et le web de demain (HTML5 and the Web of the future)
by Dominique Hazaël-Massieux, François Daoust, and Robin Berjon
Paris Web 2010
(Paris Web 20102010)
Paris, France
Relevant technology area: Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
The progressive deployment of HTML5 and its many accompanying technologies open the way to using the Web to create applications with advanced features.
The Web of the future is no longer limited in terms of user interface. The deployment of CSS3, the long awaited possibility to use one’s own fonts, the support for <canvas> and <video>, and the arrival of SVG on all the browsers open up a myriad of possibilities.
This also means that the times of clicks and forms as the only possible interactions are now something of the past. APIs that create a stronger integration with the user’s device — geolocation, accelerometer —, or with the user’s data — calendar, contacts list —, that were only available to native applications are now being added to the Web of the future, where mobile is guaranteed to play a big role.
The availability of running Web applications under a local context, either as widgets or as offline applications, will remove the last differences between today’s native applications and tomorrow’s Web apps, while keeping a strong stance on the user’s security and privacy.
We are offering to review these various changes that will turn a number of today’s Web developers into tomorrow’s application developers.
An Introduction to Writing Systems & Unicode (tutorial)
Internationalization & Unicode Conference
Santa Clara, USA
Relevant technology areas: Semantic Web, Web Architecture, XML Core Technology, Web of Services, Web of Devices, Browsers and Other Agents, and Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
IRIs Beyond the Napkin: A Survey of Internationalized Resource Identifier Issues and Implementation
by Martin Dürst and Addison Phillips
Internationalization & Unicode Conference 34
Santa Clara, CA, USA
(see abstract)
If the Latin Alphabet is not your (or your customer's) main script, there are many good reasons for including non-Latin characters in a Web address (URL/URI). This presentation will tell you why, when, and how you can and should do this, and provide the necessary background to make things work for servers and clients.
Non-ASCII characters have been used in Web addresses for more than a decade. Such Web addresses have been called Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs), and since 2005 have been specified in RFC 3987. Early this year, the IETF chartered a Working Group to update the RFC 3987.
The presentation will first explain the basic rules for working with IRIs, in particular the conversion to URIs via UTF-8 and percent-encoding. To provide a deeper understanding, we will then concentrate on the major issues that the IRI Working Group is working on addressing:
Extending Bidi Support on the Web
by Richard Ishida and Aharon Lanin
Internationalization & Unicode Conference
Santa Clara, USA
Relevant technology areas: Web of Devices, Browsers and Other Agents, and Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
Accessibility Today: The Latest Standards and Guidelines
by Shawn Henry
Las Vegas, NV, USA
Relevant technology areas: Web of Devices, Browsers and Other Agents, and Web Design and Applications.
Bringing Together Usability and Accessibility
by Shawn Henry
Las Vegas, NV, USA
Relevant technology areas: Web of Devices, Browsers and Other Agents, and Web Design and Applications.
Mobile Web Best Practices - lessons learned since 2008
by Phil Archer
Bristol, United Kingdom
Relevant technology areas: Web of Devices and Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
Technologies for the upcoming web: Standards for the next web platform
by Olle Olsson
J. Boye Conference Aarhus 2010
Aarhus, Denmark
Relevant technology area: Web Design and Applications.
(see abstract)
Combine the Web of Data and the Web of Documents (tutorial)
by Ivan Herman, Stéphane Corlosquet, and Lin Clark, in cooperation with the China Office
9th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC 2010)
Shanghai, China
Relevant technology areas: Semantic Web and Web Design and Applications.