Structured multimedia authoring
MULTIMEDIA '93 Proceedings of the first ACM international conference on Multimedia
GRiNS: a graphical interface for creating and playing SMIL documents
WWW7 Proceedings of the seventh international conference on World Wide Web 7
SMIL 2.0 Part 2: Examples and Comparisons
IEEE MultiMedia
Multispace behavioral model for face-based affective social agents
Journal on Image and Video Processing
The Design Space of Information Presentation: Formal Design Space Analysis with FCA and Semiotics
ICCS '07 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Conceptual Structures: Knowledge Architectures for Smart Applications
Using Context Information for Tailoring Multimedia Services to User's Resources
MMNS '07 Proceedings of the 10th IFIP/IEEE International Conference on Management of Multimedia and Mobile Networks and Services: Real-Time Mobile Multimedia Services
A temporal data model for intelligent synchronized multimedia integration
ACIIDS'12 Proceedings of the 4th Asian conference on Intelligent Information and Database Systems - Volume Part III
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The World Wide Web Consortium's Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language format for encoding multimedia presentations for delivery over the Web is a little-known but widely used standard. First released in mid-1998, SMIL has been installed on approximately 200,000,000 desktops worldwide, primarily because of its adoption in RealPlayer G2, Quicktime 4.1, and Internet Explorer 5.5. In August 2001, the W3C released a significant update with SMIL 2.0. In a two-part report on SMIL 2.0, the author will discuss the basics of SMIL 2.0 and compare its features with other formats. This article will focus on SMIL's basic concepts and structure. Part two, in the January-March 2002 issue, will look at detailed examples of SMIL 2.0, covering both simple and complex examples. It'll also contrast the facilities in SMIL 2.0 and MPEG-4