- From: Susan Lesch <lesch@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 12 Mar 2001 22:11:10 -0800
- To: w3c-announce@w3.org
W3C Weekly News Week of 6 March - 12 March 2001 Annotea Project Launches Home Page 9 March 2001: The product of collaboration at W3C, the Annotea project now has a home page. Annotations are external remarks attached to any Web document. When the user gets the document he can load the annotations and see what his peer group thinks. The first client implementation of Annotea is W3C's Amaya browser and authoring tool. See a quick tutorial for annotations to get you started. This project is part of the W3C Semantic Web Activity Advanced Development work to develop and deploy RDF infrastructure. http://www.w3.org/2001/Annotea/ http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/Activity Winie 1.0.8 Available 9 March 2001: Winie version 1.0.8 is available for download. Winie is a free network utility to put, get, and delete files on the Web using HTTP/1.1. Version 1.0.8 features basic support for the Content-Language entity-header field and a digest authentication bug fix. Winie discussion takes place on the public mailing list www-winie@w3.org. http://jigsaw.w3.org/Winie/ http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-winie/ W3C Team to Give Tutorials at CeBIT 8 March 2001: Four W3C Team members will give tutorials at the CeBIT 2001 world business fair and exhibition in Hannover, Germany: Philipp Hoschka, SMIL on 23 March; Daniel Dardailler, WAI on 24 March; Bert Bos, Styling on 26 March; and Rigo Wenning, P3P on 27 March. Browse past W3C Team talks and presentations and upcoming W3C appearances and events. http://www.cebit.de/ http://www.w3.org/People/ http://www.w3.org/Promotion/Appearances/ _________________________________________________________________________ The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is 512 Member organizations and 67 Team members leading the Web to its full potential. W3C is an international industry consortium jointly run by the MIT Laboratory for Computer Science (MIT LCS) in the USA, the National Institute for Research in Computer Science and Control (INRIA) in France, and Keio University in Japan. The W3C Web site hosts specifications, guidelines, software and tools. Public participation is welcome. W3C supports universal access, the semantic Web, trust, interoperability, evolvability, decentralization, and cooler multimedia. For information about W3C please visit http://www.w3.org/ _________________________________________________________________________ To subscribe to W3C Weekly News, please send an email to mailto:w3c-announce-request@w3.org with the word subscribe in the subject line. To unsubscribe, send an email to mailto:w3c-announce-request@w3.org with the word unsubscribe in the subject line. (If you subscribed through w3c-news, use mailto:w3c-news-request@w3.org to manage your subscription.) To send W3C a message, please refer to http://www.w3.org/Mail/. Thank you. _________________________________________________________________________
Received on Monday, 12 March 2001 23:11:47 UTC