W3C Interaction Smil

Synchronized Multimedia

What´s New ? | Specifications | Getting Help | SMIL Players | SMIL Authoring Tools |Demos |Background | Accessibility | Past News | Mailing List Archive | Subscribe/unsbscribe| Timed-Text


SMILTM

The Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language (SMIL, pronounced "smile") enables simple authoring of interactive audiovisual presentations. SMIL is typically used for "rich media"/multimedia presentations which integrate streaming audio and video with images, text or any other media type. SMIL is an easy-to-learn HTML-like language, and many SMIL presentations are written using a simple text-editor.

For a more detailed description of the goals of the SMIL language, see the W3C Activity Statement on Synchronized Multimedia; a regularly updated report to W3C members that is also available to the public.

The public is invited to send comments and information requests about SMIL to the public mailing list www-smil@w3.org (public archives).

What´s New ?

  1. 06 October 2008: The SYMM Working Group has published the SMIL 3.0 Proposed Recommendation.
  2. 10 January 2008: The SYMM Working Group has published the Timesheets 1.0, an XML timing language that makes SMIL 3.0 element and attribute timing control available to a wide range of other XML languages.
  3. January 2008: The SYMM Working Group has published the SMIL 3.0 Candidate Recommendation. Comments, Implementation experiences and test cases are welcome.
  4. July 2007: The SYMM WG releases SMIL 3.0 Last Call Working Draft. Comments are welcome through 14 September 2007.
  5. Dec 2005: The AMBULANT team at CWI announces the release of the AMBULANT 1.6 player, with full support for SMIL 2.1. The Player supports the new SMIL 2.1 Mobile and SMIL 2.1 Extended Mobile profiles and includes SMIL 2.1 support into the existing SMIL Language profile. This version of AMBULANT is useful when evaluating the SMIL 2.1 specification. It also contains a range of performance and bug fixes for the SMIL 2.0 language support.The AMBULANT 1.6 player is available for Linux, OS X, Windows desktop, Windows TabletPC and Windows PocketPC implementations.

Past news ...

Specifications

- Latest SMIL 3 version: (The latest version of the SMIL 3.x specification,whatever its maturity). http://www.w3.org/TR/SMIL3/
- Latest SMIL 2 version: (The latest version of the SMIL 2.x specification,whatever its maturity). http://www.w3.org/TR/SMIL2/
- Latest SMIL Recommendation: (The most mature SMIL Recommendation (whatever the major revision number). http://www.w3.org/TR/SMIL/

SMIL 2.1

SMIL 2.0

SMIL 1.0

SMIL in MMS

Media formats

The following media formats (registered and non-registered mime types) are supported in the following implementations (to be updated)

Getting Help

Press Articles

Tutorials

Public Mailing List

The public is invited to send comments and information requests about SMIL to the public mailing list www-smil@w3.org (public archives). The list is open to everyone. To subscribe, try quick subscribe. If that does not work, send a mail with "Subject: subscribe" to www-smil-request@w3.org. If you have problems subscribing/unsubscribing, see more info on W3C mailing list administration.

Players

SMIL 2.1

SMIL 2.0

SMIL 1.0

Authoring Tools

Demos

Background

Accessibility

Past News


Thierry Michel (tmichel@w3.org), W3C activity lead for the W3C Multimedia Activity
$Date: 2008/10/07 09:10:24 $ by $Author tmichel $