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About the W3C Blog

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.

Read other blogs at W3C (Working Groups, CEO, etc.).

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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 W3C Blog.

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

From Innovation to Standard

Today we introduce Community Groups as a place for developers to collaborate on next generation Web technologies. Our stakeholders have told us that a lightweight environment for innovation is necessary because the market evolves at such a rapid pace. We...

» Read on...

"Great course, money well invested. Thank you."

The June 2011 mobile Web training course is just over. We are now sending certificates of completion to students who passed all course assignments. Excellent success rate so far, with students happy to have spent 8 weeks with us. Week...

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Open Web Platform Weekly Summary - 2011-07-13 - 2011-07-28

The weekly summary of the Open Web Platform is out. A lot of discussion about HTTP. The IETF has been meeting recently in Canada. Anne Van Kesteren covers what I have not in his report. HTML5 is still in Last Call but the last call is finishing on August 3, 2011

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Extensions to the CSS Object Model

The CSS Object Model is now almost eleven years old. All Web authors know it's only partially implemented and rarely interoperably implemented. There is now an ongoing effort to stabilize the most mature bits of the specification. Thirteen years ago,...

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How to fold Jeff's table columns with CSS

The 'collapse' keyword in CSS is designed for HTML viewers that interactively expand & collapse table columns. Current browsers don't do that by themselves, but with the help of some other features of CSS you can make browsers collapse columns, too. Here is the story behind the tutorial that explains how.

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This blog is written by W3C staff and working group participants,
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