WWW 2004 Developers Day CFP

Apologies for sending this to many mailing lists, but the WWW 2004 
website links have been odd and many people have not seen this

on the web at:  http://www2004.org/ded.htm

WWW 2004 Developer's Day
Call for Participation

Developer/Specialists Day
World Wide Web Conference


The Developers and Specialists Day Committee requests proposals for
individual presentations or, preferably, multi-talk tracks, for
presentation at the World Wide Web Conference on Developers and 
Specialists Day.   It is expected that 5-6 parallel sessions will be 
offered, with presentations in each focusing on tools and techniques 
of application to the World Wide Web.  Preferred presentations will 
be of interest to a wide
range of participants working on Web-related development.

Potential topics and tracks may be for a particular area of Web development
-- Web Services, Semantic Web, XML tools, etc. -- or for cross-cutting
topics that may be of interest to those in multiple areas -- photo and
mutlimedia access, new browser technologies, new developments in search
tools, etc.

The Developer's Day track has historically focused on late-breaking,
practical, and commercial innovations to a greater degree than the main
conference. Industrial experience reports are particularly encouraged.

Submissions should be in the form of an abstract of no more than 500 
words for an individual presentation.   For multiple-presentations or 
tracks,
please be sure to indicate the approximate length and how many
presentations, and include up to a 1/2 page on each presentation to occur.

Submissions will be accepted on a rolling basis with a final deadline of
April 30.

send your submissions to:  devday@www2004.org

Jim Hendler and Rohit Khare, Dev Day Co-Chairs
-- 
Professor James Hendler			  http://www.cs.umd.edu/users/hendler 
Director, Semantic Web and Agent Technologies	  301-405-2696
Maryland Information and Network Dynamics Lab.	  301-405-6707 (Fax)
Univ of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742	  240-277-3388 (Cell)

Received on Tuesday, 16 March 2004 20:05:56 UTC