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HTML 5 Ready for Broad Testing and ReviewRatification of HTML 5 is on track for 2014. The Last Call milestone, reached on May 24, opens up the HTML 5 Working Draft specification for final testing and broad public comment.
Microsoft is among the organizations working on the HTML5 publishing language for creating standard Web pages, alongside participants from Adobe Systems, Apple, Google, Mozilla Foundation, Nokia and many others.
HTML 5 is the W3C's next spec for Web technologies since HTML 4.01 was released in 1999, according to a blog by Paul Cotton, cochair of the HTML Working Group at the W3C and group manager for Web services standards and partners in the Microsoft Interoperability Strategy Team. Last Call is the stage at which the W3C gets final comments on what they consider to be relatively stable code. This comment period for reporting bug issues with HTML 5 ends on August 2. The W3C's full timeline for completing the Last Call milestone is published here.
The next major milestone after Last Call will be the Candidate Recommendation period, scheduled for completion in the second quarter of next year, according to the W3C's timeline, which is subject to change. A Proposed Recommendation period follows, scheduled for completion in the first quarter of 2014. The actual Recommendation, expected to appear in the second quarter of 2014, is the phase where the W3C formally endorses the spec.
Even though HTML 5 currently is not feature complete, the W3C says in its FAQ that HTML 5 can be used today. "One can use HTML5 today, knowing the existing limitations and using fallback mechanisms," the FAQ states. HTML 5 notably has some accessibility issues to be addressed, according to the W3C.
Cotton noted a few features that have already been popularized, including HTML 5's support for video in browsers, which previously have relied on using browser add-ons, such as Adobe's Flash or Microsoft's Silverlight. He also pointed to audio support and the use of the canvas tag for two-dimensional graphics. Cotton previously floated the idea in an interview that many applications could be written entirely in HTML 5.
Six parts of the broad HTML 5 spec are up for testing and comments, including "HTML5," "HTML+RDFa 1.1," "HTML Microdata," "HTML Canvas 2D Context," "Polyglot Markup: HTML-Compatible XHTML Documents" and "HTML5: Techniques for providing useful text alternatives," according to the W3C's announcement.
The W3C currently has 1,276 approved test cases and 28,858 submitted tests for HTML 5, according to a blog by Philippe Le Hégaret, who is described as the "W3C manager responsible for HTML5, CSS, SVG, WOFF, and other user interaction technologies."
Also last week, the W3C published its report on Web tracking and user privacy, based on an event held at Princeton University in April. Attendees agreed that some sort of "do not track" Web technology should be standardized, and that there should be an ongoing focus on Web privacy issues at the W3C.