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W3C Compound Documents Workshop Position Papers Available

The position papers for The W3C Workshop on Web Applications and Compound Documents are now available for you viewing pleasure.  I love this topic (rendering multi-namespace documents), but I can not attend this workshop, but I will be watching it closely.  I’m glad to see that friends and others that I have lots of respect for have submitted papers, Doug Schepers and Kevin Lindsey, Jim Ley, Alex Hopmann and Michael Wallent (from the Microsoft Avalon team), and Jon Ferraiolo (from Adobe).  It will be great to hear the feedback from the non-MS crowd about the multi-namespace rendering done in Avalon, and how their vision differs from what is proposed in Avalon. 

Oh, and congrats to Kevin Lindsey!  He recently took an employee position with Xamlon.  Kevin was one of the leads on the open source SharpVectors project (an open source .Net rendering engine for SVG), and is a natural fit for Xamlon.  If you are looking for a XAML today, check out Xamlon.

Published Tuesday, May 18, 2004 6:59 AM by donxml

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About donxml

I’m an independent consultant, specializing in .Net solutions architecture, based out of New Jersey who also doubles as an evangelist for XML, Domain Driven Design, enterprise architecture and .Net. I do not work for Microsoft, the W3C or any other big company that you may know of (at least not yet). I’ve been an indie for over ten years, and although I’ve been tempted a couple times to take a job with companies like Microsoft, I’ve haven’t found something better than my current situation. I work mostly with the large pharmaceuticals that are based here in New Jersey, and usually find myself on long term contracts. Definitely not the prototypical indie consultant, but it lets me dedicate time to my non-income generating activities like the developer community stuff, plus financing open source projects like XPathmania and MVP-XML. If you would like to talk to me about doing some contract work, just contact me via the contact page. My rates vary widely, depending on lots of different variables, but mostly distance from Jersey, and type of work. Plus, I’ve been known to donate some of my code for various projects.
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