extrememarkup07

Extreme 2007 Final Proceedings Posted

The complete, final, post-conference revised proceedings for Extreme Markup Languages 2007 have been posted at http://www.idealliance.org/papers/extreme/proceedings/

On-site materials (slides), late-breaking papers, and transcripts of the opening and closing talks have been added to the proceedings.

On-site Guide Now Available

The On-site Guide for Extreme 2007 is now available. This 16 page PDF file contains descriptions of all the presentations scheduled for Extreme 2007, room assignments, and general information about the conference.

Topics for Extreme 2007

Extreme is the Markup Theory & Practice conference. That means that a wide variety of subject matter is appropriate and welcome. Here is a list or possible topics for Extreme, intended to suggest and inspire, but not to limit:

  • XQuery, XSL-FO, XSLT, SVG, Pipelining, Topic Maps, RDF, TMQL,DSDL, OWL, SGML, XML, XSD, RELAX NG ...
  • markup for document production
  • markup for preservation and reuse of cultural artifacts
  • issues in the design and deployment of markup vocabularies
  • engineering tradeoffs in the design of markup-driven systems
  • overlapping structures and how to represent them
  • bias, objectivity, neutrality and ontological commitment in markup, markup design and software tools
  • trees, tuples, sequences, directed graphs, and other data structures for the representation of information
  • better markup as a tool for making the Web more useful
  • the future of multi-purpose content
  • the future of structured documents
  • designing, creating, using, mainipulating, and interpreting marked-up content
  • new markup-related tools
  • markup semantics
  • new approaches to old problems and new
  • things you can and can't do with XML
  • things it never occurred to you that anyone would want to do with XML
  • alternatives to popular specifications and techniques
  • treating non-XML data as if it were XML
  • treating XML data as if it were non-XML
  • implementation reports: love songs or horror stories