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Second Annual SVG Open Conference 20

michael bolger points to this announcement that "SchemaSoft and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) will host the 2nd annual SVG Open Conference on Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) in Vancouver, British Columbia from July 13-18, 2003 at the Westin Bayshore Resort & Marina. The SVG Open 2003 Conference and Exhibition is a forum for software developers, Web developers, graphic artists and other technical specialists to exchange ideas, methods and advances related to Web graphics."
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Second Annual SVG Open Conference

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  • 5 days? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 11, 2003 @11:35PM (#5934390)
    Is it really possible to spend five days talking about an image format no one has ever used?
    Day 1: Has anyone used it yet?
    Day 2: Why hasn't anyone used it yet?
    Day 3: You got any svgs? Nope, you?
    Day 4: Foosball
    Day 5: Hangover recovery
    • Re:5 days? (Score:4, Informative)

      by waffle zero ( 322430 ) on Sunday May 11, 2003 @11:53PM (#5934476) Journal
      Is it really possible to spend five days talking about an image format no one has ever used?

      BuddyZoo [buddyzoo.com] has a nice use for SVG, you may have heard of it somewhere [slashdot.org]. I don't like the Adobe SVG Viewer [adobe.com] but the Apache Software Foundation's Batik [apache.org] project is good for turning SVG into a nice (albiet big) PNG.

      java -jar batik-rasterizer.jar FILE.svg

      Although you might have to futz around with the svg code generated by to get it to work with Batik. Run it through an XML validator to see what I mean. (There is top level <svg> but two closing </svg> so delete the one that isn't at the end.)

  • It sure would be nice if Adobe would release an updated version of their SVG plugin. The current one, 3.0, is from November 2001 [adobe.com]. The Linux version is still beta 1.

    Or does anyone know of other ways to render SVG in the browser besides the Adobe plugin?

    JP

  • ... until it works with mozilla.

    i just downloaded and installed adobe's svg viewer. (why the hell doesn't it work in mozilla natively, or at least be made available as a plugin?) it doesn't work. click a link, tell it to open the SVG file, about three dialog boxes pop up giving me errors.

    so i save the file to my desktop, and launch from there. same three error boxes coming up telling me to save it to disk and launch it from there.

    so i look in the start menu for this mysterious program and use the ope
    • The Adobe viewer seems to work fine in my Mozilla browser, Phoenix 0.5 (er, Firebird that is, as it's now known.) I don't remember if I had to do anything special to install it or not -- probably had to copy some DLLs to the plugin directory.
  • by robj ( 18902 ) on Monday May 12, 2003 @04:45PM (#5939933) Homepage
    We implemented an interactive drag-and-drop drawing tool using the Adobe SVG plugin. It's frankly amazing to drag things around as though you were in Visio (connection points and all), yet to be doing it just by updating the DOM of the drawing itself. Developing with SVG is incredibly fast.

    SVG is enormously more useful than many realize. It's also one of those technologies that's not going away... it'll take a while for everyone to learn just how good it is, but once they do, watch out!

    Cheers!

"Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler." -- Albert Einstein

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