This week: #web25 anniversary at #www2014, Real Work Modes of HTML WG, EU Data Retention Directive invalid, etc.
This is the 4-11 April 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
Nothing stood out particularly this week; I noted a few mentions of:
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) WWW2014: Pictures of W3C team and cake, #web25 anniversary at #www2014 via Raphaël Troncy, Mary Ellen Zurko - (
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) W3C Memes: W3C process diagram - (
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) W3C Blog: From Web Pages to the Web of Things, by Dave Raggett - (
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) WWW2014: Fabien Gandon’s Slides of W3C Linked Data and semantic web tutorial - (
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) HTML WG: HTML WG's Real Work Modes
Open Web & net rights
- Court of Justice of the European Union: The Court of Justice declares the Data Retention Directive to be invalid, 8 April 2014
- Gigaom: The rise of mobile apps and the decline of the open web — a threat or an over-reaction?, 8 April 2014
W3C in the Press (or blogs)
5 articles this week. Read more and find keywords on our Press clippings.
- CITEworld (10 April), Internet Explorer: Another sign of a faster, more open Microsoft
- The Next Web (9 April), Chrome 34 launches with support for responsive images, unprefixed Web Audio, and importing supervised users
- Geek (9 April), Google Chrome now remembers the passwords your bank doesn’t want it to
- KBS World Radio (9 April), Internetexperten aus der ganzen Welt kommen in Seoul zusammen (Internet experts from around the world come together in Seoul)
- Banking Technology (7 April), Real-time payments: coming to America?
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