This week: #HTML5 Proposed Recommendation, After HTML5, #W3C20, etc.
Part of Corporate
This is the 12-19 September 2014 edition of a "weekly digest of W3C news and trends" that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and its work is perceived in online media.
W3C and HTML5 related Twitter trends
[What was tweeted frequently, or caught my attention. Most recent first]
- (
30
) Spec: HTML5 Differences from HTML4 - (
40
) Mozilla Japan: Mozilla Open Web Day in Tokyo (10/5) - (
110
) Opera: 20 years ago, @timberners_lee founded the @w3c. That means it's time to celebrate! Read about the #w3c20 event - (
2.9K
) Sencha: Apple Shows Love for HTML5 with iOS 8 - (
145
) Bruce Lawson: To close gap with native, I hope W3C are working on open standard equiv of this iOS8 feature [HKBodyTemperatureSensorLocation] - (
50
) Robin Berjon: Next steps after HTML5 - (
200
) Spec: Call for Review: HTML5 Proposed Recommendation
Open Web & net neutrality
- The New York Times (15 September), F.C.C. Revisits Net Neutrality Exemption for Mobile Broadband
W3C in the Press (or blogs)
6 articles since the last Digest; a selection follows. You may read all articles in our Press Clippings page.- Engadget (19 September), Google wants websites to work more like apps, even offline
- The Guardian | Technology (18 September), Google and Dropbox launch Simply Secure to improve online security
- Sencha (16 September), Apple Shows Love for HTML5 with iOS 8
- Chron (9 September), Already 1 billion websites, and counting
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