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Google Graphics

Google To Host International SVG Conference 38

stelt writes "On Oct.2–4 Google will host the international conference on Scalable Vector Graphics at its campus in Mountain View, California. The SVG Open conference schedule shows developers and designers of various backgrounds. Major brands, open source projects, universities, and individuals are presenting on a variety of subjects like interactive scientific visualizations, mobile web animation art, internationalization and localization in print, geo-systems, etc. A couple of weeks back we discussed Google's adding SVG support to IE, and details of this project will be presented during the keynote 'SVG in Internet Explorer and at Google.'" Early-bird registration has already ended for this conference, but the pricing is not steep.
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Google To Host International SVG Conference

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  • by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) on Friday September 04, 2009 @11:19AM (#29311521) Homepage Journal

    It's been somewhat amazing to me that an open standard for any kind of scalable vector graphics model on the web has taken so long to take off. The web has mostly been a graphical environment with bandwidth constraints. It seems a natural. I suspect a conspiracy.

    SVG has been around for quite sometime. The first specifications were released in 2001, Every major browser except IE supports SVG out of the box. The biggest reason it has been slow in adoption is the lack of support in IE, which is mostly due to Microsoft's former stagnation between the releases of IE 6.0 and IE 7.

    The concept of vector-based graphics wasn't so big in the early days of the Web mostly because computers, consumer desktops especially, were underpowered for display lots of complex vector graphics very quickly, as anyone who was using Corel Draw or even Illustrator in the early 90s can certainly attest to.

    Nowadays, though PCs have plenty of horsepower to draw vector graphics quickly, so long you keep the number of nodes down. :)

  • by Canazza ( 1428553 ) on Friday September 04, 2009 @11:29AM (#29311671)

    IE 7+ use VML [wikipedia.org] which is almost identical in it's abilities to SVG. It's not trivial to write a content engine that gives SVG over VML for whatever browser that requires it, but it can be done with a bit of effort. It'd just be nice if MS played vall

  • Poor Opera really (Score:5, Informative)

    by Ilgaz ( 86384 ) on Friday September 04, 2009 @08:34PM (#29319447) Homepage

    I see Opera, still a small company compared to others have sponsored the event and they are one of the earliest ones to support SVG inside browser.

    Result? Not even mentioned in scoop. No matter what they do, what they invent, they never get mentioned anyway.

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