People in cafeJean Paoli
speakingAmsterdam rooftopsXTech delegats
XTech 2007: “The Ubiquitous Web”15-18 May 2007, Paris, France
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Schedule: Browser technologies sessions

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Amphitheatre B
This is a panel discussion with key people involved in the charting the future of HTML standards -- not just at the W3C, but also within the WHATWG and the microformats community. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
Molly Holzschlag (molly.com, inc.)
Take better control of web browser interoperability — not only through hacks, but through an understanding of why browsers work the way they do. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
Jeremy Keith (Clearleft)
They're small, they're simple, and they're showing up everywhere. Find out just how easy it is for you to start publishing with microformats and add to the semantic richness of the Web right now. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
We will present technical approaches addressing the explosion of online information hidden in HTML pages today. This example-filled presentation will focus on the latest examples and implementations. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
Duane Nickull (Adobe Systems)
MXML is a declarative language used to build Flex and Apollo applications. At first glance, it appears to be a simple XML vocabulary however it is a far more advanced framework. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
Tetsuya Tashiro (Justsystems corporation)
This presentation will discuss the characteristics of structure and authoring process of document-centric XML and present a approach to realizing user-friendly authoring tool. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
Dave Johnson (Nitobi)
A critical look at the pros and cons of declarative Ajax development, which frameworks use it and an examination of a complete declarative Ajax component. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
Geir Pedersen (Opera), Arve Bersvendsen (Opera Software ASA)
Opera Widgets offer a new model for creating web technology based applications where the full application is installed on the client and can access data from multiple HTTP servers. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
Antoine Quint (Joost)
A look at how various client-side XML technologies, such as SVG and Compound Documents, are being put to use to build The Venice Project internet television application. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
Guido Grassel (Nokia Research Center)
Our presentation explains how Web technologies can reduce the complexity and effort for developing UIs for mobile applications and ease the integration of device applications and Web-based services. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
Rocco Georgi (PavingWays)
Ajax helps to make the web ubiquitous - also on mobile devices. However, browser and device limitations complicate things. The talk explores those and provides best practices for mobile web apps. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
CSS3 adds features for printing web content. Footnotes, multi-column layout and crop marks are among the features described in the emerging specifications. Read more.
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Amphitheatre B
We show how making a user-to-user communication protocol available to web authors significantly changes the interactions we can design and the very way we think about "web applications". Read more.
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Bastille-Notre Dame
Conrad Parker (Annodex Association)
CMMLWiki is your personal video blog and archive with video upload, on-the-fly metadata editing and Annodex for in-browser playback from arbitrary offsets and discoverable, distributed video search. Read more.
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Bastille-Notre Dame
Henri Sivonen (Henri Sivonen)
The design and implementation of an HTML5 conformance checker based mainly on XML tools--a RELAX NG and Schematon validator--is discussed. Augmenting schema validation with custom code is discussed. Read more.