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About the W3C Q&A Weblog

This weblog has been created for information and discussions between W3C and the Web community at large, as an informal companion to the news items on the W3C homepage. Announcements, issues on Web standards and educational materials among other topics will be published on this weblog.

Individual blog entries, posted by W3C Staff or Working-Group participants, generally do not represent the consensus of the W3C, but express individual opinions of the respective author.

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Quality Assurance at W3C

This page used to be the home page for the Quality Assurance activity at W3C, and has since been broadened in scope and audience to become the Q&A weblog.

W3C continues to strive for quality, through testing and a quality process (see the QA Matrix), Quality Tools and documents.

Archives of the life of the Quality Assurance are still available: visit the home page of the QAIG, the former QAWG or its calendar.

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Latest News / Articles

Semantic Web Applications

It so happens that, in a short time, several entries appeared in the blogosphere on Semantic Web applications. David Provost published a report, Richard MacManus published a blog in ReadWriteWeb or, in the last issue of Talis’ Nodalities, Ian Davis...

» Read on...

Understanding HTTP PUT

HTTP is not very well understood, and most of the time, it is ok. But when it is time to create a Web application, having a solid understanding of HTTP verbs will help you to create a good citizen of the Web. This is my attempt to explain HTTP PUT. Your comments are welcome.

» Read on...

HTML 5 And The Hear-Write Web

Is there a way to improve the HTML ecosystem in a way that creates more adoption of HTML 5? From parsing to serialization to fixing, how do we recover broken Web documents?

» Read on...

The Slideshow Must Go On

These are a few hints on how to create a slideshow for a conference. Web conferences busy bees are often in need of illustrations for their slides. There are solutions to easily spice up your technology talk.

» Read on...

Alexa Global Top 500 against HTML 5 validation

Following Brian Wilson lead and his validity survey, I tested against html 5. Less than 1% of top 500 Alexa Web sites seems to pass html 5 conformance checking.

» Read on...

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This blog is written by W3C staff and working group participants,
 and maintained by Karl Dubost and olivier Thereaux.
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