Follow W3C Internationalization work
If you want to track the W3C Internationalization work, this page offers several alternatives.
Tracking announcements
The home page carries all the news postings. Some of the more recent items are highlighted and pointed to from near the top of the page. You can use links on the home page to search for specific news items by category, by date or by a straighforward search.
There are two twitter channels:
- @webi18n Carries all the news from the home page.
- @multilingweb Highlight information from the home page and other information that tends to have a bias towards language technology and linked data.
Tracking discussions
Most of the discussion occurs on GitHub issue lists. The list of groups should point you to relevant GitHub repositories, where you can elect to follow issues. You may prefer to follow the www-international mailing list, since it receives a daily digest listing GitHub activity related to internationalisation.
If you prefer weekly digests, you can join public-i18n-core mailing list.
A number of mailing lists are also used to support the internationalization work at W3C. The best way to find lists to follow is, again, to check the list of groups. The lists are all archived.
Categorized news feeds
All news on the home page.
Highlighted news only.
Events and other announcements.
Pointers to ongoing discussions or requests for feedback.
Requests for review of draft resources.
Notification of new resources.
Resources that have been updated.
Older news
- Pre-WordPress news: Announcements - Resources - Reviews - Changes - Translations - Tests - General
- See also the list of even earlier previous news.
- Planet web i18n: This page aggregated various recent blog posts and tweets about Web internationalization (i18n). Atom feed
