Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
LONDON, February 26 /PRNewswire/ -- A new era in the sharing and publishing of news starts today with the
launch of NewsML-G2 and EventsML-G2, the first parts of a new framework of
XML-based news exchange formats from the International Press
Telecommunications Council.
To support some of the latest innovations in web technology, NewsML-G2
allows the bundling of multiple news items -- articles, photos, videos or
whatever - and a detailed description of their content and how the items
relate to each other. Whether populating a website with complex news packages
or building bundles of news items for resale or archiving, NewsML-G2 provides
an easy way to package and exchange news.
EventsML-G2 provides a detailed way to describe any event (a football
game, a convention, a community event) so that sharing and databasing can be
done quickly, easily and with a minimum of errors. Many aspects of an event
such as the starting time, duration, description of the event and contact
information, can be encoded in a way that is easily understood and
publishable even across multiple languages.
"This is a breakthrough in news exchange format design as G2-Standards
cover a wide range of news content to cope with the growing demand for
individualised news products," said IPTC Chairman Stéphane Guérillot, and
"this all is achieved by a common framework which makes the adoption and
implementation of G2-Standards easy and requires much less resources."
This initial release of IPTC's G2 family of standards coincides with the
10th anniversary of XML, the lingua franca of the World Wide Web. Released in
February 1998, XML brought the structure of web documents into sharper focus
by allowing content providers (such as news agencies, newspapers, news
websites, radio and TV stations) to create and publish complex documents
using relatively simple and widely supported development tools. In fact, many
XML tools are available free on the Internet.
G2-Standards also fit into the Semantic Web initiatives of the World Wide
Web Consortium, enriching content so that computers can more easily search
the huge universe of news. The goal is to better help news agencies manage
and distribute their massive libraries of current and archived news content,
and to help customer search engines find content quickly and accurately.
G2-Standards can be easily combined with IPTC's groundbreaking NewsCodes,
which provide a rich suite of standard terms for describing news, to give
news agencies amazing flexibility in how news can be bundled for downstream
users. With widely available digital news archives now dating back to 1850 or
earlier, news agencies, librarians and archivists have a special interest in
the rapid searching and retrieval of news, which NewsCodes can accelerate to
help drive revenue growth.
As always, IPTC G2-Standards and NewsCodes can be incorporated into
products without any payment of royalties or usage fees, subject to
acknowledging IPTC's license agreement.
About the IPTC: The IPTC, based in London, UK, is a consortium of the
world's major news agencies, news publishers and news industry vendors. It
develops and maintains technical standards for improved news exchange that
are used by virtually every major news organization in the world. Information
on all IPTC standards such as the new IPTC G2-Standards, the existing NewsML
1, NITF, SportsML, IIM standards and the NewsCodes together with a list of
existing members and information on how to join is available at
http://www.iptc.org
IPTC
Media contact:Michael Steidl, IPTC Managing director, Phone: +44(0)20-3178-4922, Email: office@iptc.org