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The W3C blog is for in-depth Web standards topics and educational materials. More information in About W3C Blog.
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W3C Team Planet... or Galaxy
The W3C staff (or W3C Team) are the people employed by the W3C organization. I'm one of them. Some of us have blogs for quite a long time, personal or professional, or both. The question of creating a public aggregation...
- aggregation
- blog
- community
- w3c
- w3c-team
If you had to fix the Web...
"If you had to fix the Web... what would you do?"
- auto
- css
- html
- http
- security
- usability
- w3c
Many ways to access W3C mailing-lists
W3C may be about Web technologies, but a lot of its discussions happen... by e-mail. With more than 600,000 public mails archived to date, how can we manage the information overload? And how can that influence our online behaviour?
CSS Validator gets an update
More than 50 bugs closed, a polished User Interface, and some useful core changes: the CSS validator got a great update, but did it have to take a year? Let's look at what is slowing down, and where you can help, too.
- css
Telephone Game about the Semantic Web
I'm no Mark Twain, but reports of Google's demise are greatly exaggerated. Today Tim Berners-Lee pointed me to this headline in the Times Online: "Google could be superseded, says web inventor." This, in turn, has morphed into more ominous restatements...
HTML WG members working together
Published:
By: Karl Dubost
Web standards are made by people. They interact, discuss, debate. They find issues, argue about them and finally try to settle down on what should be done. In the end, eventually it would be specified properly in a W3C Working Draft and then implemented in an interoperable way. It takes time and energy. I give here an example of a recent discussion between members of the HTML WG.
- html
- html5
- implementation
- interoperability
- w3c
- working-group