Fwd: Three RDFa Recommendations Published

Yay!

Thanks to eveyone!

Ivan

Begin forwarded message:

> Resent-From: w3c-ac-members@w3.org
> From: Ian Jacobs <ij@w3.org>
> Subject: Three RDFa Recommendations Published
> Date: August 22, 2013 18:12:44 GMT+02:00
> To: "w3c-ac-forum@w3.org" <w3c-ac-forum@w3.org>
> Archived-At: <http://www.w3.org/mid/A059A7D0-2C51-4687-9B49-D7783D60B5BA@w3.org>
> List-Id: <w3t.w3.org>
> 
> Dear Advisory Committee representatives,
> 
> It is my pleasure to announce the following Recommendations:
> 
>  HTML+RDFa 1.1:
>  http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/REC-html-rdfa-20130822/
> 
>  RDFa 1.1 Core - Second Edition
>  http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/REC-rdfa-core-20130822/
> 
>  XHTML+RDFa 1.1 - Second Edition
>  http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/REC-xhtml-rdfa-20130822/
> 
> In response to the Call for Review [1], all reviewers supported publishing these as Recommendations.
> Please join us in congratulating the W3C RDFa Working Group [2] on this achievement.
> 
> This announcement follows section 8.1.2 [3] of the W3C Process Document.
> 
> For Tim Berners-Lee, Director,
> Thomas Roessler, Technology and Society Domain Lead, and
> Ivan Herman, Semantic Web Activity Lead, RDFa Working Group Staff Contact;
> Ian Jacobs, Head of W3C Communications
> 
> [1] https://www.w3.org/2002/09/wbs/33280/rdf201306/ [Member-only link]
> [2] http://www.w3.org/2010/02/rdfa/
> [3] http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/acreview#ACReviewAfter
> 
> -------
> Titles and Abstracts
> 
> HTML+RDFa 1.1
> 
> This specification defines rules and guidelines for adapting the RDFa Core 1.1 and RDFa Lite 1.1 specifications for use in HTML5 and XHTML5. The rules defined in this specification not only apply to HTML5 documents in non-XML and XML mode, but also to HTML4 and XHTML documents interpreted through the HTML5 parsing rules.
> 
> 
> RDFa Core 1.1 - Second Edition
> 
> The current Web is primarily made up of an enormous number of documents that have been created using HTML. These documents contain significant amounts of structured data, which is largely unavailable to tools and applications. When publishers can express this data more completely, and when tools can read it, a new world of user functionality becomes available, letting users transfer structured data between applications and web sites, and allowing browsing applications to improve the user experience: an event on a web page can be directly imported into a user's desktop calendar; a license on a document can be detected so that users can be informed of their rights automatically; a photo's creator, camera setting information, resolution, location and topic can be published as easily as the original photo itself, enabling structured search and sharing.
> 
> RDFa Core is a specification for attributes to express structured data in any markup language. The embedded data already available in the markup language (e.g., HTML) can often be reused by the RDFa markup, so that publishers don't need to repeat significant data in the document content. The underlying abstract representation is RDF, which lets publishers build their own vocabulary, extend others, and evolve their vocabulary with maximal interoperability over time. The expressed structure is closely tied to the data, so that rendered data can be copied and pasted along with its relevant structure.
> 
> XHTML+RDFa 1.1 - Second Edition
> 
> RDFa Core 1.1 [RDFA-CORE] defines attributes and syntax for embedding semantic markup in Host Languages. This document defines one such Host Language. This language is a superset of XHTML 1.1, integrating the attributes as defined in RDFa Core 1.1. This document is intended for authors who want to create XHTML Family documents that embed rich semantic markup.
> 
> --
> Ian Jacobs <ij@w3.org>      http://www.w3.org/People/Jacobs
> Tel:                                          +1 718 260 9447
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


----
Ivan Herman, W3C 
Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/
mobile: +31-641044153
FOAF: http://www.ivan-herman.net/foaf.rdf

Received on Thursday, 22 August 2013 16:53:25 UTC