- From: Janet Daly <janet@w3.org>
- Date: Wed, 8 Feb 2006 09:58:35 -0800
- To: w3c-news@w3.org
W3C is launching an Incubator Activity, a new initiative to encourage
discovery of emerging Web-related technologies that complements the
current W3C Recommendation Track.
"With the Incubator Activity, W3C Members and Invited Experts can now
combine Web technology discovery with the outstanding technical
resources of W3C and see what develops," explained W3C Chief
Executive Officer Steve Bratt. "We are now seeing multiple proposals
which are likely to test their wings in the W3C Incubator."
For more information, contact Janet Daly <janet@w3.org> at +1 617 253
5884 or the W3C Communications Team representative in your region.
W3C Launches Incubator Activity
New Option Available for Exploratory Technical Work at W3C
Web resources
This press release
In English: http://www.w3.org/2006/02/incubator-pressrelease.html.en
In French: http://www.w3.org/2006/02/incubator-pressrelease.html.fr
In Japanese: http://www.w3.org/2006/02/incubator-pressrelease.html.ja
W3C's Incubator Activity
http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/
The charter for the first Incubator Group, to work on Content Labels
http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/wcl/
http://www.w3.org/ -- 8 February 2006 -- Today, the World Wide Web
Consortium (W3C) announces the launch of its Incubator Activity, a
new initiative to foster development of emerging Web-related
technologies that complements the current W3C Recommendation Track.
The Incubator Activity offers the W3C Membership and the Web
community a new, streamlined process for discussing and developing
interesting and possibly controversial ideas that are not (or not
yet) clear candidates for standardization.
"With the Incubator Activity, W3C Members and Invited Experts can now
combine Web technology discovery with the outstanding technical
resources of W3C and see what develops," explained W3C Chief
Executive Officer Steve Bratt. "We are now seeing multiple proposals
which are likely to test their wings in the W3C Incubator."
The first Incubator Group will address the topic of "Content Labels."
The W3C Members who are sponsoring this first Incubator Group are:
@semantics; Internet Content Rating Association (ICRA); Institute of
Informatics & Telecommunications, NCSR; Institute for Learning and
Research Technology (ILRT); University of Bristol; Segala; T-Online;
Vodafone; and Yahoo!
W3C Provides New Approach for Discovery-stage Work
The W3C Recommendation Track process has a record of success for
engineering standards that are fundamental to the Web's
infrastructure. The Recommendation Track facilitates the development
of high-quality standards that reflect the consensus of the
Membership, Team, and the public. Coordination within the community,
interoperability testing, and thorough review are all important
aspects of the Recommendation Track process.
The Web community has also sought to conduct more exploratory work
within W3C. The Incubator Activity is designed to nurture emerging
concepts that may or may not contribute to the future core Web
architecture, and also technologies traditionally considered part of
the applications layer. The new streamlined process enables focused
groups of interested W3C Members and invited experts to start and
progress new work quickly in an Incubator Group (called an "XG"),
culminating in an "Incubator Group Report." The Incubator Activity is
designed to make it easy to move work to the W3C Recommendation Track
when there is momentum to standardize the results.
First W3C Incubator Group to Study Content Labels
The charter for the W3C Content Label Incubator Group states that a
goal for the group is to to find " a way of making any number of
assertions about a resource or group of resources. In order to be
trustworthy, the label containing those assertions should be testable
in some way through automated means."
"The XG is really about making it easy for content providers to
publish data on key characteristics of their material. This will
allow search engines, aggregators and other systems, having validated
the data in some way, to personalize the content they offer to end
users," explained Phil Archer, Chief technical officer for ICRA. "Our
initial use cases look at identifying such things as suitability for
mobile devices, conformance with accessibility guidelines,
trustmarks, relevance to school study and, in ICRA's area of
interest, suitability for children."
The group expects to publish two documents within one year.
Contact America --
Janet Daly, <janet@w3.org>, +1.617.253.5884 or +1.617.253.2613
Contact Europe --
Marie-Claire Forgue, <mcf@w3.org>, +33.492.38.75.94
Contact Asia --
Yasuyuki Hirakawa <chibao@w3.org>, +81.466.49.1170
About the World Wide Web Consortium [W3C]
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is an international consortium
where Member organizations, a full-time staff, and the public work
together to develop Web standards. W3C primarily pursues its mission
through the creation of Web standards and guidelines designed to
ensure long-term growth for the Web. Over 400 organizations are
Members of the Consortium. W3C is jointly run by the MIT Computer
Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (MIT CSAIL) in the
USA, the European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics
(ERCIM) headquartered in France, Keio University in Japan, and has
additional Offices worldwide. For more information see http://
www.w3.org/
Received on Wednesday, 8 February 2006 17:58:47 UTC