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    Web 2D Graphics: State-of-the-Art
    (Eurographics Association, 2001) Duce, David; Herman, Ivan; Hopgood, Bob
    The early browsers for the Web were predominantly aimed at retrieval of textual information. Tim Berners-Lee's original browser for the NeXT computer did allow images to be viewed but they popped up in a separate window and were not an integral part of the Web page. In January 1993, the Mosaic browser was released by NCSA. The browser was simple to download and, by the Autumn of 1993, was available for X workstations, PCs and the Mac. From 50 Web servers at the start of 1993, Web traffic had risen to 1% of internet traffic by October and 2.5% by the end of the year. About a million downloads of the Mosaic browser took place that year. In February of 1993, Mark Andreessen proposed the element as an extension to Mosaic's HTML to provide a way of adding images to Web pages. In 1994, Dave Raggett developed an X-browser that allowed text to flow around images and tables and from then on images were an accepted part of the Web page. Web pages became glossier and the enormous growth of the Web started [1] [2]. Organisations could customise their home pages with the company logo. Maps, albeit images, could be added to show how to reach the organisation. Its products could be displayed on the Web. Eventually, the Web would become a major commercial outlet.
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    SVG Linearization and Accessibility
    (Blackwell Publishers, Inc and the Eurographics Association, 2002) Herman, Ivan; Dardailler, Daniel
    The usage of SVG (Scaleable Vector Graphics) creates new possibilities as well as new challenges for theaccessibility of Web sites. This paper presents a metadata vocabulary to describe the information content ofan SVG file geared towards accessibility. When used with a suitable tool, this metadata description can helpin generating a textual ('linear') version of the content, which can be used for users with disabilities or withnon-visual devices.Although this paper concentrates on SVG, i.e. on graphics on the Web, the metadata approach and vocabularypresented below can be applied in relation to other technologies, too. Indeed, accessibility issues have a muchwider significance, and have an effect on areas like CAD, cartography, or information visualization. Hence, theexperiences of the work presented below may also be useful for practitioners in other areas.ACM CSS: I.3.4 Graphics Utilities-Graphics Packages, I.3.6 Methodology and Techniques-Graphics datastructures and data types, Standards, K.4.2 Social Issues-Assistive technologies for persons with disabilities
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    Web 2D Graphics File Formats
    (Blackwell Publishers Ltd and the Eurographics Association, 2002) Duce, David; Herman, Ivan; Hopgood, Bob
    The earliest Web browsers focussed on the display of textual information. When graphics were added, essentially only image graphics and image file formats were supported. For a significant range of applications, image graphics has severe limitations, for example in terms of file size, download time and inability to interact with and modify the graphics client-side. Vector graphics may be more appropriate in these cases, and this has become possible through the introduction of the WebCGM and Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) formats, both of which are open standards, the former from ISO/IEC and W3C and the latter from W3C. This paper reviews the background to Web graphics, presents the WebCGM file format, and gives a more detailed exposition of the most recent format, SVG. The paper concludes with reflections on the current state of this area and future prospects.