1 / 7

Things I found interesting Malcolm Graham , S958

Seybold Conference 1999 San Francisco, Aug 30-Sept 3 To view conference transcripts: http://www.seyboldseminars.com/Events/archive_index.html Name: sfalumni ; Password: insf99. Things I found interesting Malcolm Graham , S958. Nortel at Seybold. Nortel people I met at Seybold.

lel
Télécharger la présentation

Things I found interesting Malcolm Graham , S958

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Seybold Conference 1999San Francisco, Aug 30-Sept 3To view conference transcripts: http://www.seyboldseminars.com/Events/archive_index.htmlName: sfalumni; Password: insf99 Things I found interesting Malcolm Graham, S958

  2. Nortel at Seybold Nortel people I met at Seybold From left to right Alan Proffitt, Malcolm Graham, Dustin Taylor, Derek Cadzow, Tim Chandler, Bob Mutter, Kerri-Ann Belanger, Kris Lizuck

  3. Topic list Summary of things I found of interest • XML (extensible markup language) • ICE (information & content exchange) • SVG (scalable vector graphics) • E-commerce

  4. XML (extensible mark-up language) What is it? Why is it important? • XML is a method for tagging structured data in a text file (based on SGML); is designed to meet the challenges of large-scale electronic publishing and will be widely used in the future for the exchange of data across Web • XML 1.0 specification defines context-interpretable tags & attributes for developing applications that work with each other; growing set of optional modules; e.g., Xlink, XSL, DOM, RDF, DTD; see http://www.w3.org/XML/ and http://www.ibm.com/developer/xml/; see tutorial • Makes it easy to automatically process data using inexpensive software • Enables the display of information as required • Provides metadata, data about information, to ease the task of finding the right information • Enables definition of platform-independent protocols for data exchange (e.g., ICE) especially for E-commerce

  5. ICE (information & content exchange) What is it? Why is it important? • ICE is an XML-based protocol designed primarily for business-to-business network-based interactions; for example, syndicated publishing networks, Web superstores, and online reseller channels by establishing Web-site-to-Web-site information networks. See http://www.gca.org/ • The ICE specification provides a common language & architecture to facilitate the process of automatically exchanging, updating, supplying & controlling assets in a trusted fashion without manual intervention or knowledge of remote Web site structures • ICE will be widely used for E-commerce • Example: National Semiconductor site, see http://www.national.com/

  6. SVG (scalable vector graphics) What is it? Why is it important? • SVG is a language for describing two-dimensional graphics in XML. SVG can be dynamic and interactive. SVG can be animated via scripting. See http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/ • SVG, which is XML-based, may replace GIF, JPEG, Flash & QuickTime on the web and is independent of the display platform (monitor, TV, LED, or print) • SVG features: small size, high-resolution, zooming & panning inside graphics without reloading, animation, filter, kerning, masking, scripting, & linking • Users can obtain dynamic information from an SVG object; since SVG is XML-based, it's entirely text-based which allows search engines to index SVG objects and users to search for text within them (for example, button text or a street name on a map)

  7. E-commerce What is it? Why is it important? • E-commerce will dominate web development thrusts over the next few years • Business-to-consumer: 8 to 108 billion by 2003 • Business-to-business: 131 billion to 1.5 trillion by 2003 • Business-to-business (web-server-to-web-server) will be the dominant focus with secondary focus on consumer • XML, ICE, SVG, and dynamic information delivery will be the dominant technologies employed • Enabling digital content for E-commerce: Adobe announced WebBuy plugin for Acrobat Reader and PDF Merchant (server-based technology) • Examples: Microsoft BizTalk; Open Buying on the Internet (OBI); RosettaNet, CommerceNet • Web trends & metrics, see http://www.thestandard.net/

More Related