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SMIL Standards and Microsoft Internet Explorer 6, 7, and 8

Since the draft of the SMIL standard in 1995 many organizations implement one of the available versions of the W3C SMIL standard in there end-user products. Macromedia, RealNetworks and Microsoft have some products supporting the SMIL standards, but especially Microsoft with the more dominant role in the browser market have failed to support SMIL fully in the in the past. With Internet Explorer 6 many functions of SMIL did work, but will this be the same for Internet Explorer 7 and even 8 is something that we look at in this review of SMIL and Micosoft

Realtext and SMIL

If you've been following our series of articles on SMIL/G2, you've already seen an overview of G2/SMIL technology, URLs for all the tools you'll need, and a detailed G2/SMIL Tutorial. The first tutorial covered RealPix and the SMIL language, and if you were able to follow through, enabled you to get started creating your own SMIL presentations. In this tutorial, we'll cover RealText, and show you how to use it along with RealPix in your SMIL presentations. To get started, we consulted RealNetworks RealText Creation Guide. For reference, we used the

SMIL When You Surf That : Structured Multimedia Integration Language

My wife is a tenderfoot in the Web development arena. Imagine how surprised I was when, after just earning her certificate in Web design, she sprung this revelation on me: "HTML is going to be replaced by SMIL." I thought, "Who do you think you're talking to, sister?" I reckon I was most put off because I wasn't sure I knew exactly what SMIL was. Structured Multimedia Integration Language (SMIL) is to multimedia developers what HTML is to linked-content developers. I remember reading about SMIL a few years back, but I recall thinking that it

Smile with SMIL: A Jumpstart to SMIL

SMIL (pronounced as "smile") – Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language is an XML application defined by World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). SMIL 2.0 [1] has just been released as the W3C recommendation on 7th August 2001. The main design goal as stated by W3C is to define an XML-based language that allows you to write interactive multimedia presentations as well as allowing you to reuse the SMIL syntax and semantics in other XML-based languages such as XHTML. SMIL is an XML-based and vendor neutral markup language that allows you to build


 
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