Empresas y finanzas

IPTC Will Launch Its New 'G2 Family of Standards' for News Exchange in 2007



    Endorsing a new generation of XML-based standards for
    exchanging news, the directors of the International Press
    Telecommunications Council have approved further development of the
    IPTC G2 Family of Standards with a target release date in 2007.
    The IPTC G2 Family of Standards will allow news agencies to
    smoothly exchange news -- text, photos or other media -- while using
    standard XML modules and tools. The result will be lower costs and
    shorter development for news agencies and news system vendors who
    facing the challenges of presenting the news on the web and personal
    electronic devices.
    More than 50 delegates from around the world met on 2-6 July 2006
    for a regular working session of the IPTC, followed by the formal
    annual general meeting. The delegates, who represent most of the
    world's major news agencies, news publishers and news system vendors,
    form the working core of IPTC's standards development.
    Most of the delegates' work in Vienna centered on the IPTC G2
    Family of Standards. Formerly loosely known as NewsML 2, the IPTC
    G2-standards will include separate wrappers for general news as well
    as specialized content such as sports. The wrappers will share
    structures and components, such as support for sports and events data,
    so that developers can easily recognize the common XML tags and reuse
    pieces of software code.
    Delegates also established a working group to study possible
    expansion of the popular IPTC photo header, used by virtually every
    news photographer worldwide. The IPTC header, which is supported by
    most popular photo editing software, has been in use for more than 10
    years. It was recently updated and released as new "IPTC Core"
    standard to support Adobe's XML-based metadata framework, known as
    XMP.
    In other business, IPTC delegates re-elected Stephane Guerillot of
    Agence France-Presse to a second one-year term as chairman of the
    board of directors. John Minting of United Press International was
    elected to the board, replacing Geoffrey Haynes of The Associated
    Press who chose not to stand for re-election.
    The next regular meeting of the IPTC will be held in Madrid in
    October 2006. The Annual General Meeting for 2007 will be in Tokyo.
    The IPTC, based in Windsor, England, is a consortium of the
    world's major news agencies, news publishers and news industry
    vendors. It develops and maintains technical standards that are used
    by virtually every major news organization in the world.