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MCN-RLG cosponsored workshop
***Getting Started with XML, November 8, 2003***
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
in conjunction with MCN 2003 Las Vegas, Nov 5-8
*Registration deadline extended until October 15th*
Designed for information professionals in the cultural heritage community,
this workshop employs numerous examples, demonstrations, and structured,
hands-on exercises in a computer lab setting to acquaint participants with
XML (eXtensible Markup Language). Topics in this day-long event include
adding value to electronic texts, creating archival finding aids, and
implementing standards-compliant Web pages. The $150 fee covers the full
day, including a 75-page workbook.
By the close of the workshop you will have acquired a thorough introduction
to XML and be able to
- articulate why XML is important for museums and libraries,
- list the six rules governing the syntax of XML documents,
- create your very own XML markup language,
- write XML documents using a plain text editor and validate them using a
Web browser,
- apply page layout and typographical techniques to XML documents using
cascading style sheets,
- create simple XML documents using a number of XML standards.
What you learn in this workshop will enable you to evaluate uses of XML for
making your institution's data and information more accessible to people as
well as computers.
Please register before October 15th at
https://corpweb.igs.net/~clarkeservices/mcn/mcn2003/register.htm to secure
a seat - space in the lab is limited, and seats are going fast! For more
information on the workshop and the MCN annual conference in general,
please see http://www.mcn.edu/Mcn2003/confmain/index.html.
Instructor: Eric Lease Morgan, Head, Digital Access and Information
Architecture Department, University Libraries of Notre Dame. Eric Morgan in
an experienced instructor in this area as well as the principal of
Infomotions, Inc., which offers consulting and programming services to help
clients make better use of their information assets.
Co-Sponsored by RLG
Founded as the Research Libraries Group in 1974, RLG (www.rlg.org) is a
not-for-profit membership corporation of universities, national libraries,
archives, and other memory institutions with remarkable collections for
research and learning. RLG and its members collaborate on projects that
bring these collections online, help deliver them around the world, and
support their preservation in digital form. Headquartered in Mountain View,
California, RLG also has an office in New York City.
Günter Waibel
Program Officer/RLG
**Until October 3, 2003**
1200 Villa Street. Mountain View CA 94041 USA
**Beginning October 6, 2003**
2029 Stierlin Court, Suite 100, Mountain View, CA 94043 USA
Phone (now and then): 650-691-2304
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