Coming to an e-book or car near you: the Web
BARCELONA, Spain--You're used to the Web on your PC. You're getting used to it on your smartphone. So what's next?
Publishing and automobile industry players have just begun spinning up
efforts at the World Wide Web Consortium, said W3C Chief Executive Jeff
Jaffe in an interview at Mobile World Congress here. So don't be
surprised to see proprietary technology for e-book readers and in-dash
computer systems slowly disappear in favor of software based on Web
technology.
Books are perhaps an obvious area for Web technology, given that in electronic form they're just formatted documents and the Web began its life as a way to share formatted documents. But the two domains have taken years to reach today's level of convergence.
"The Web equals publishing," Jaffe said. "There's really no difference anymore."
Among the inroads Web technology has made into publishing:
The Web, though, is more than a static publishing medium now. With each
passing year it becomes a more sophisticated vehicle for interactive
applications, too. That raises the prospect eventually of more
interactive books, too.
That interactivity is part of the reason the automotive industry is
getting involved, too. Web technology can be used for writing in-car
software for shopping, navigation, and the usual array of work and
personal uses of the Web today such as e-mail or social networking.
The automotive industry also has new areas, though. Just as work to
adapt the Web to mobile phones, letting Web applications run the
interface with hardware such as accelerometers and gyroscopes, the
car industry is contemplating specific interactions with vehicular systems and data.
The W3C work also involves ensuring the technology can be used in a way to minimize driver distraction, Jaffe said.
The new directions follow in the footsteps of entertainment-industry players such as Netflix that climbed aboard the Web platform. That project began two years ago and is now bearing fruit.
Building on the earlier HTML5 work that added a mechanism for building
video into Web sites without needing plug-ins, programmers and standards
bodies have more recently been concentrating on digital rights
management (DRM). That lets video be encrypted and adaptive streaming so
video can change quality as network conditions change.
The Web work extends from streaming services to hardware such as TVs and
set-top boxes. One benefit of moving to Web technology is that it
lowers barriers between PCs and other devices, making it easier to build
online services that don't care about what specific hardware they're
dealing with.
It isn't always easy reconciling the philosophy of the Web with the
demands of industry, though. Ian Hickson, and influential HTML standard
editor, objected strenuously to DRM-ccontrolled video on the Web,
but the standard doesn't actually build DRM into the Web. Instead, it
provides a mechanism to hand off encryption to separate software. The
new technology is arriving in browsers, including Google's Chrome.
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