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Read our blog, the Group Wellesley Wire!
2008 Conferences and Training Events
May 6 - 9, 2008
DocTrain West Conference
Vancouver, Canada
Group Wellesley, Inc. President Alan Houser will deliver the following
presentations and workshops:
- Using DITA for Online Help
- Making DITA Work for your Data (hands-on workshop on DITA specialization)
- DITA Authoring and Publishing with XMetaL (hands-on workshop)
June 1 - 4
STC Summit (Conference)
Philadelphia, PA
June 23 - 26
DocTrain Life Sciences Conference
Indianapolis, IN
Group Wellesley, Inc. President Alan Houser will deliver the following
presentations and workshops:
- What’s New in Collaboration Tools
- Do you Know Adobe Acrobat?
- Migrating to Structured Authoring on Your Way To XML
October 29 - November 1
DocTrain East Conference
Burlington, MA
Alan Houser is scheduled to present two full days of hands-on
Adobe Technical Communication
Suite training.
November 5 - November 7
Tekom
World Conference, Wiesbaden, Germany
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Resources
Group Wellesley offers continuing education presentations on
topics such as SGML and XML publishing, single-source documentation
solutions, and getting the most from your documentation tools.
Below are some of the topics presented by Group Wellesley. Contact us if you are interested in learning more
about Group Wellesley's educational presentations.
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Managing and Delivering your Content as Data Houser, A. (2003). From Intercom, a publication of the Society for Technical
Communication.
The author presents an overview of the
capabilities and entry points for data-driven publishing. Subjects include
template-based authoring, XML authoring and publishing, database publishing and
content management solutions.
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Creating XML Content Houser, A. (2002). From Intercom, a publication of the Society for Technical
Communication.
The author evaluates three commercial software packages for authoring
XML documents: ArbortText Epic, Adobe FrameMaker 7, and SoftQuad XMetaL. The article
notes particular feature requirements needed by authors who are
creating XML documents.
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XML Schemas for Publishing Applications Houser, A. (2001).
Presented to XML 2001, Orlando, Florida, December 2001.
The author reviews the W3C XML Schema Recommendation of May, 2002,
with particular attention to the needs of XML publishers.
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XML Editors: Fact or Fiction? Houser, A. (2001).
Presented to PittMark (Pittsburgh Markup Language Users
Group).
An informal overview of currently-available XML editors. The
author makes several observations:
XML
editors fall into two general categories: document-centric and
data-centric.
Data-centric editors (i.e., XML
Spy) are woefully inadequate for human users who wish to create
document-oriented content.
There
is a dearth of document-centric editors on the market.
Many
editors in both categories are "missing" important XML-related
functionality. For example, Softquad's XMetaL does not support
namespaces; Tibco's XML Instance
will not validate an XML document against a DTD.
At
least for now, one should consider other options (other than native
XML editors) for getting document-oriented XML content from human
authors.
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Trends in XML
Software Houser, A. (2001). From Intercom, a publication of the Society for Technical
Communication.
The author evaluates several currently available XML authoring
tools and speculates on the future of XML authoring tools and
XML-based publishing.
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Creating XML
Documents with the Tools You Already Have Houser, A. (2000).
Presentation to the Society for
Technical Communication, Pittsburgh Chapter.
By mapping Microsoft® Word styles and Adobe® FrameMaker
paragraph formats to XML elements, you can create XML documents
that are sufficient to drive many XML document-based
applications.
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FrameMaker and XML: What Can I Do Now? Houser, A. (2000).
Presentation to the FrameUsers Conference, San Diego,
California.
Adobe has been criticized for the weakness of XML support in
FrameMaker and FrameMaker+SGML version 6.0. The author argues:
Adobe's level of XML support in FrameMaker and
FrameMaker+SGML (including lack of XML import) is justified, given
that several key XML-related specifications are not yet
finalized.
FrameMaker and FrameMaker+SGML support XML better than nearly any
other professional print publishing tool available today.
FrameMaker and/or FrameMaker+SGML can today serve as the basis of
an XML-based publishing system.
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Using Style Sheets to
Publish XML to the Web Houser, A. (2000).
Presentation to the FrameUsers Conference, San Diego,
California.
XML is about separating content from format. How do you specify
the format of an XML document? Use a style sheet. The author
presents the two types of XML style sheets (CSS and XSLT), and
discusses the strengths, applications, and limitations of each.
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Hyperpublishing with
XML, Part I: XSL, XSLT Houser, A. (2000).
Presented as part of the PittMark XML tutorial series.
This talk discusses the capabilities of the XML transformation
language, XSLT, for publishing XML documents to the Web.
The author presented this talk in conjunction with Pete Beazley
of ClearlyOnline, Inc. View Beazley's portion, Hyperpublishing with XML, Part
II: XPath, XLink, XPointer.
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Single-Source
Publishing with FrameMaker+SGML and Perl Houser, A. (1999).
FrameUsers Conference, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
This is a case study of a single-source SGML-based publishing
system that implemented by the author while a staff member at Clairvoyance
Corporation (formerly CLARITECH Corporation), Pittsburgh, PA.
The author notes that he would approach the project differently
today (such as using an off-the-shelf parser, as opposed to writing
one). Several aspects of this paper are still valid, including the
difficulty and importance of choosing meaningful, intuitive element
names to represent different audience types. |
© 2008 Group Wellesley, Inc.
All Rights Reserved

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