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The Internet of the future: Semantic Web

The Semantic Web is a new idea that came from the creator of the WWW, URIs, HTTP and HTML. Imagine yourself the information from all over the world being linked as in a global database, in such a way that the information would be easily processable by the machines, on the global scale. This could be the next step in improving the efficiency of representing the data from the Internet. W3C is already working on creating the new Internet standard, as many tools, languages and publications that are focused on semantic web have already been created. But

Multimodal Toolkit and XHTML+V: a new step towards the future

In order to ease the development of devices with visual and voice interfaces for PDAs and other handheld devices, the Multimodal Toolkit and Rational Application Developer can be used. By using these products one can minimize the skills and time needed for creating complicated programs that use XHTML+V(XHTML + VOICE) on compatible devices. XHTML+V is a new technology, that combine XHTML and voice interfaces on small devices, like PDAs and tablets. It is accomplished by combining different web standards, such as ECMAScript, JavaScript,

Creating a Semantic Web

If you have ever tried to gather information about web standards, you might have come through Phrases such as Semantic Web, Dublin Core Metadata or RDF. If you have gone through the documentations that are available on these subjects, and then are some some artificial intelligence terms like reify mentioned. The document mainly explains what does all these terms mean, and helps you in deciding on parts, which require more attention and the basic reason behind this. The Semantic web is very revolutionary but prior to the web, we use to have

An Introduction to SMIL

Jeffery Zeldman has long been considered the King of Web Standards. In this article for A List Apart back in 2001 he talked a little bit about SMIL and what it would mean for web standards and accessibility. "SMIL stands for “Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language,” and is pronounced “Smile.” Isn’t that cute? Oh, shut up. SMIL is an easy-to-learn, HTML-like language for creating “TV-like multimedia presentations such as training courses on the web,” according to the W3C. The current SMIL recommendation is 1.0, and you can read all


 
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