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The Web Conference

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The Web Conference
Logo of the First International Conference on the World-Wide Web (1994)
AbbreviationWWW
DisciplineWorld Wide Web
Publication details
PublisherIW3C2
History1994–present
FrequencyAnnual
Robert Cailliau, Founder of International World Wide Web Conference

The International World Wide Web Conference (abbreviated as WWW) is a yearly international academic conference on the topic of the future direction of the World Wide Web. The WWW was first created by Tim Berners-Lee in 1989 at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland. The first conference of many was held and organized by Robert Cailliau in 1994, the conference has been organized by the International World Wide Web Conferences Steering Committee (IW3C2), also founded by Robert Cailliau and colleague Joseph Hardin, every year since.[1] The conference’s location rotates among North America, Europe, and Asia and its events usually span a period of five days. The conference aims to provide a forum in which "key influencers, decision makers, technologists, businesses and standards bodies" can both present their ongoing work, research, and opinions as well as receive feedback from some of the most knowledgeable people in the field.[2]

The conference series is aimed at providing a global forum for discussion and debate in regard to the standardization of its associated technologies and the impact of said technologies on society and culture. Developers, researchers, internet users as well as commercial ventures and organizations come together at the conference to discuss the latest advancements of the Web and its evolving uses and trends, such as the development and popularization of the eTV and eBusiness.[3] The conferences usually include a variety of events, such as tutorials and workshops, as well as the main conference and special dedications of space in memory of the history of the Web and specific notable events.[4] The conferences are organized by the IW3C2 in collaboration with Local Organizing Committees and Technical Program Committees.[5]

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is a partner to these conferences but does not organize them.[6]

History

Robert Cailliau, a founder of the World Wide Web himself, lobbied inside CERN and at conferences like the Hypertext conference 1991 in San Antonio, Texas, and 1993 in Seattle, Washington.[7] As he came back from the conference 1993 he announced a new conference called World Wide Web Conference 1 and was actually 23 hours faster than the NCSA announced Mosaic and the Web.[7] After funding the IW3C2 with Joseph Hardin from the NCSA they decided the next Conferences in Geneva.[7]

Content

Though the way in which its content is organized varies from year to year, the World-Wide Web Conference nevertheless has continued to be the "premiere venue for researchers, academics, businesses, and standard bodies to come together and discuss [the] the latest updates and the state and evolutionary path of the Web".[8] People from all across the world come together in the spirit of such a tradition, submitting their own cutting-edge, exciting new research to be peer reviewed by some of the World Wide Web community’s most knowledgeable members.

At its most recent conference, WWW’s largest program, peer reviewed research paper presentations, fell into one of eleven categories:

  • Behavioral analysis and personalization
  • Content analysis
  • Crowd phenomena
  • Internet economics and monetization
  • Security, privacy, trust and abuse
  • Semantic web
  • Social networks and graph analysis
  • Software infrastructure, performance, scalability, and availability
  • User interfaces, human factors, and smart devices
  • Web mining
  • Web search systems and applications

Those papers accepted will not only be presented at the conference itself, but appear in the online conference proceedings published by the ACM Digital Library as well as the conference’s website. Furthermore, many of these papers continue to be submitted to other peer-reviewed journals consequent to the conclusion of the conference.[8]

In addition to presenting breakthrough research on the Web and its associated technologies, the Conference acts as a stage for developers to demonstrate and receive feedback on their ongoing work in a dedicated session. The Demo Track allows researchers and practitioners to demonstrate new systems in a dedicated session. The Developer Track is a track dedicated solely to web development, a stage upon which web developers can present "new trends and interesting ideas [as well as the] code and APIs of emerging applications, platforms, and standards." [9]

Though peer-reviewed research paper presentations, demo, and developer tracks are a large portion of the conference’s program, it is not merely a launch pad for individuals who have completed cutting edge research in the field. Students studying the Web and its associated technologies can submit unfinished work for review. Beginner as well as senior PhD students are encouraged to present their ideas to the PhD Symposium for review. This is a unique opportunity to receive feedback on their work from experienced researchers as well as other senior PhD students working in related research areas. All applications and submissions are looked over by the Symposium Program Committee. This committee includes other experienced researches. These people are able to help the applicants and guide them in their work.[10] Researchers and practitioners are also encouraged to submit their new and innovative work-in-progress. Providing them with a unique opportunity to gain feedback from their peers in an informal setting, the Poster Track provides its presenters invaluable feedback from knowledgeable sources as well as other conference attendees with an opportunity to learn about novel ongoing research projects whose results already appear promising, despite their incompletion.[11]

Lastly, the Conference allows for a series of co-located workshops to its attendees dedicated to emergent Web topics. These workshops work to not only create an open dialogue amongst all researchers and practitioners of Web technologies but also a potential means of collaboration in present and future endeavors.[11]

List of conference editions

Past and future WWW conferences include:[12]

Year Conference City Country
2018 WWW2018 Lyon  France[13] (provisional - subject to contract)
2017 WWW2017 Perth  Australia
2016 WWW2016 Montreal[14]  Canada
2015 WWW2015 Florence  Italy
2014 WWW2014 Seoul  South Korea
2013 WWW2013 Rio  Brazil
2012 WWW2012 Lyon  France
2011 WWW2011 Hyderabad  India
2010 WWW2010 Raleigh, North Carolina  United States
2009 WWW2009 Madrid  Spain
2008 WWW2008 Beijing  China
2007 WWW2007 Banff  Canada
2006 WWW2006 Edinburgh  United Kingdom
2005 WWW2005 Chiba  Japan
2004 WWW2004 New York  United States
2003 WWW2003 Budapest  Hungary
2002 WWW2002 Honolulu, Hawaii  United States
2001 WWW10 Hong Kong  Hong Kong
2000 WWW9 Amsterdam  Netherlands
1999 WWW8 Toronto  Canada
1998 WWW7 Brisbane  Australia
1997 WWW6 Santa Clara  United States
1996 WWW5 Paris  France
1995 (December) WWW4 Boston  United States
1995 (April) WWW3 Darmstadt  Germany
1994 (October) Mosaic and the Web (later WWW2) Chicago  United States
1994 (May) WWW1 Geneva  Switzerland

References

  1. ^ "Past and Future Conferences".
  2. ^ "Past and Future Conferences".
  3. ^ Business/Technology Editors. "Ninth International World Wide Web Conference Opens Today: Latest Developments in Trend-Setting Technologies Revealed". Business Wire. Retrieved 19 March 2014. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  4. ^ Business & Hi-Tech Editors. "Web Inventor Tim Berners-Lee to Keynote; Premier International World Wide Web Conference". Business Wire. Retrieved 19 March 2014. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  5. ^ "International World Wide Web Conference, 28th March - 1st April 2011, Hyderabad, India". Www2011india.com. Retrieved 19 September 2011.
  6. ^ Herman, Ivan (1 February 2009). "International World Wide Web Conferences ("WWW2000X")". World Wide Web Consortium. Retrieved 20 November 2010.
  7. ^ a b c Petrie, Charles; Cailliau, Robert (November 1997). "Interview Robert Cailliau on the WWW Proposal: "How It Really Happened."". Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. Retrieved 18 August 2010.
  8. ^ a b "Call for Research Papers" (PDF).
  9. ^ "Call for Papers- Demo Track" (PDF).
  10. ^ "The 23rd International World Wide Web Conference: Call for PhD Symposium" (PDF).
  11. ^ a b "Call for Workshop" (PDF).
  12. ^ "Past and Future Conferences". IW3C2. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  13. ^ International World Wide Web Conferences Committee.
  14. ^ 25th World Wide Web Conference - Home.