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SMIL 3.0: Multimedia for the Web, Mobile Devices and Daisy Talking
Books is a revised introduction to - and resource guide for - the
W3C SMIL language. It covers all aspects of the SMIL specification
and covers all of SMIL's implem- tation profiles, from the desktop
through the world of mobile SMIL devices. Based on the first
version of the book, which covered SMIL 2.0, this edition has been
updated with information from the past two releases of the SMIL l-
guage. We have benefitted from comments and suggestions from many
readers of the first edition, and have produced what we feel is the
most comprehensive guide to SMIL available anywhere. Motivation for
this Book While we were working on various phases of the SMIL
recommendations, it became clear to us that the richness of the
SMIL language could easily ov- whelm many Web authors and
designers. In the 500+ pages that the SYMM working group needed to
describe the 30+ SMIL elements and the 150+ SMIL attributes, there
was not much room for background information or extensive examples.
The focus of the specification was on implementation aspects of the
SMIL language, not on the rationale or the potential uses of SMIL's
declarative power.
SMIL 3.0: Multimedia for the Web, Mobile Devices and Daisy Talking
Books is a revised introduction to - and resource guide for - the
W3C SMIL language. It covers all aspects of the SMIL specification
and covers all of SMIL's implem- tation profiles, from the desktop
through the world of mobile SMIL devices. Based on the first
version of the book, which covered SMIL 2.0, this edition has been
updated with information from the past two releases of the SMIL l-
guage. We have benefitted from comments and suggestions from many
readers of the first edition, and have produced what we feel is the
most comprehensive guide to SMIL available anywhere. Motivation for
this Book While we were working on various phases of the SMIL
recommendations, it became clear to us that the richness of the
SMIL language could easily ov- whelm many Web authors and
designers. In the 500+ pages that the SYMM working group needed to
describe the 30+ SMIL elements and the 150+ SMIL attributes, there
was not much room for background information or extensive examples.
The focus of the specification was on implementation aspects of the
SMIL language, not on the rationale or the potential uses of SMIL's
declarative power.
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