W3C Internationalization
 

W3C Internationalization Workshop

1 February 2002
Omni Shoreham Hotel, Washington DC, USA

Nearby: Program | Participants and Position Statements | Minutes | Conclusions | List Archive | Call for Participation

On this page: Background | Expected Audience | Goal | Deliverables | Position Statements | Topics | Organization | Venue and Hotel reservation | Schedule


Introduction

Background

Based on its Goal of Universal Access, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is committed to make the Web accessible to people around the world by promoting technologies that take into account the vast differences of language, script, and culture of users on all continents.

The W3C Internationalization (I18N) Activity was created in October 1995, and a workshop was held in May 1996. In February 1998, the I18N Working Group (I18N WG) and the I18N Interest Group (I18N IG) were created, initially with a duration of one year. The charters of both groups have been extended regularly, and currently end March 2002. The I18N WG and IG have been concentrating on reviewing other W3C specifications in development, and on the Character Model for the World Wide Web.

Based on feedback from W3C Members, we have decided to strengthen our internationalization work, in particular in the direction of guidelines and outreach. To define the exact shape of this effort, to allow for a wide variety of input on the Internationalization Activity, and to get more people involved, we are organizing a one-day workshop. The workshop is taking place on Friday, 1st February 2002 at the Omni Shoreham Hotel, Washington DC, USA. It is co-located with the 20th International Unicode Conference (Monday-Thursday 28-31 January 2002).

Our current understanding is that the main area we should work on, in addition to reviewing specifications, is creating guidelines. There is a need for guidelines for XML formats, document creators, webmasters, tools developers, etc., and requests from those communities for W3C to produce them. These guidelines would be in addition to the Character Model, which provides "guidelines for W3C specifications".

Expected audience

We expect several groups to contribute to the workshop:

Goal

The goal of the workshop is to reevaluate the I18N Activity and to prepare the rechartering of the I18N Activity and WG(s)/IG(s) by surveying the problems and showcasing existing solutions, raising awareness of the issues, and providing a forum for discussion.

There are a variety of actions that could be undertaken by the W3C in following up from this workshop; these include creating a new Working Group and/or Interest Group.

Deliverables

The program of the workshop will be published on the web with public access. This will include position statements and associated material.

In addition, a report on the discussions at the workshop will be made public after the meeting. Invited experts are required bona fide to stick to the confidentiality agreement. This policy may be later modified on request of the participants. If sufficient interest can be confirmed, W3C will initiate a new Working Group and/or Interest Group.


Position Statements

Position statements (also sometimes called position papers) are the basis for the discussion at the workshop.

A position statement can be as short as a few paragraphs and as long as necessary if it contains a well-defined technical contribution. Longer position statements should contain a summary. What is important is not the length, but the information that helps the workshop participants and organizers to prepare for the workshop:

Suggested topics include:

Position statements will be published on the public Web pages of the workshop, and may be distributed as printed notes to all the participants. Unless clearly indicated otherwise, submission of a position statement implies a permission for such a publication. The Chair can ask the author(s) of particularly representative position statements to explicitly present their position at the workshop to foster discussion. The Chair will be guided in this decision by the program committee. If asked for a presentation, the authors are also invited to make the slides of the presentation available on the Workshop Web site.


Workshop Organization

W3C Contact and Workshop Chair:

Martin J. Dürst (W3C)

Email: duerst@w3.org
Tel.: +81 (466) 49 1170
Address: The World Wide Web Consortium, Keio Research Institute at SFC, Keio University, 5322 Endo, Fujisawa, 252-8520 Japan.

IUC 20 Conference Management:

Barbara Jarzyna (Global Meeting Services Inc.)

Email: info@global-conference.com or: conference@unicode.org
Tel: +1 (858) 638 0206
Fax: +1 (858) 638 0504
Address: 4030 Porte La Paz #90, San Diego, CA 92122, USA.

MIT Contact:

Susan Westhaver (W3C)

Email: susan@w3.org
Tel.: +1 (617) 253-7970
Address: The World Wide Web Consortium, MIT Lab for Computer Science, 200 Technology Square, Cambridge MA 02139, USA.

Program Committee:

Richard Ishida (Xerox), Chris Lilley (W3C), Vincent Quint (W3C), Misha Wolf (Reuters), Martin J. Dürst (W3C)


Venue - Omni Shoreham Hotel, Washington DC

The workshop is co-located with the 20th International Unicode Conference (IUC). A block of rooms has been reserved at the Omni Shoreham Hotel. Workshop participants are requested to make their reservations through the IUC Conference Management to get the preferential IUC/workshop rate (rooms at the special rate of $169 per night plus taxes available until January 10th; one night charged if not canceled 72 hours from the date of arrival). Please use the reservation form even in case you do not attend the International Unicode Conference.

Note that you will need to make your own hotel reservation.

Hotel Location

Omni Shoreham Hotel
2500 Calvert Street, NW
Washington, DC 20008
USA

Tel: +1 202 234 0700
Fax: +1 202 265 7972

The Hotel is located on 11 acres in picturesque Rock Creek Park. One block from the Woodley Park

Metro Station, which connects visitors to major Washington attractions. 3 miles from Union Station, 7 miles from Reagan National Airport, 28 miles from Dulles International Airport and 33 miles from Baltimore/Washington International Airport (BWI). See IUC20 Accommodation for more details.

Schedule

Breakfast is served at 8:00am. The workshop begins at 8:30am and ends at 5pm. Lunch and coffee breaks are included. More than half of the workshop time will be devoted to discussion rather than presentations.


Martin Dürst
Last updated $Date: 2002/04/18 13:26:16 $Author: duerst $