Collaborative Tools Shine At Seybold San Francisco ’97
EVEN MORE THAN it has in the past, this years Seybold San Francisco represented the wide diversity of publishing technology in the market
today and coming in the near future. This year, the trend was clearly toward the maturation of the new technologies. XML is the logical extension of
HTML, while PDF is becoming more entrenched as a secure way to distribute preformatted content. Authoring tools are beginning to support workgroup
publishing, and content management is being accepted as a vital part of running a contemporary Web site.
In the following pages, well highlight technology developments along the following themes:
XML arrives. Seybold San Francisco 97 will be remembered as the first major conference and trade show where XML entered the
mainstream vocabulary. It was the buzz of the conference and a draw on the show floor. The demo of XML support in Internet Explorer 4 was one of the
highlights of Bill Gatess keynote address on Wednesday.
Since the event, the W3C has published a draft of the Resource Description Framework (RDF), the first XML application that both Netscape and
Microsoft have pledged to support. In light of the news, we suggest a few steps that publishers can take now to prepare themselves for the changes
XML will bring.
Web publishing systems mature. As Web sites mature into full-fledged commercial publishing ventures, the need for robust systems to
support them is becoming a very interesting market opportunity. In fact, it is evolving into one with several segments, with no one vendor yet
dominating any of them. Our coverage is broken down into three categories: document sharing, repositories and Web content management systems, with
some explanation of what to look for when evaluating these products. Among the highlights from the show floor is our first look at Zuno Digital
Publisher, a high-end system from a well-funded start-up.
The PDF explosion. Most everyone agrees that the ideal electronic document-delivery format is probably not a static snapshot
of how a document will print. Yet, support for PDF keeps mounting. The limitations of HTML compared with page formatting, the variance in display of
the same page among different Web browsers and the ease of making PDF are all factors in Acrobats favor. The PDF Pavilion at Seybold San
Francisco was a good place to catch up on the latest Acrobat plug-ins, including new ones from The Blue Team and Infodata.
The Java alternative. The alternatives to Acrobat that show most promise are Java-based viewers. They take much less footprint on the
client side, and they dont require users to preinstall Adobe Type Manager. But these systems have some maturing to do before they will be
serious challengers. J-Stream and Net-It Software showed the latest versions of their software and provided status reports.
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