The Impact of XML on the Processes and Efficiencies of the Federal Government
The focus of this paper and the presentation will be to discuss how XML has changed and improved the legislative and regulatory document creation and management processes for agencies of the federal government. During the presentation, we will briefly describe the evolution of XML adaptation in the Legislative Branch agencies. A more in depth discussion can be found at xml.house.gov.
Schulke, Edward. IDEAlliance (2004). Articles>Information Design>Government>XML
Efficient XML Encoding Town Hall
Binary XML has been a controversial and hotly debated topic in the XML community for many years. The XML 1.x syntax is very flexible and provides a common information representation for a vast array of systems. The XML marketplace has generated a seemingly endless collection of low cost, high quality, rapidly evolving technologies that make creating, sharing, manipulating, securing and accessing information easier. Systems that have adopted XML are cashing in on the economic and interoperability benefits of the XML marketplace. Some believe the introduction of a second, more efficient encoding for XML information would drastically reduce or destroy the flexibility or interoperability benefits of XML.
Rollman, Rich and John Schneider. IDEAlliance (2004). Articles>Information Design>Government>XML
XML on the Desktop: Enabling eGovernment Services World Wide
This session will provide base line information on how native XML customer-defined schema support in Office applications is enabling XML based eGovernment interests from Europe, Asia, South and North America. Concrete and deployed examples will be shared to spark a new but real perspective on leveraging popular and user-friendly desktop applications to become, via XML and Web Services, the front-end to Government back-end systems. In short, real and effective solutions to enabling eGov Services in Government to Citizens, Government to Businesses and Government to Government scenarios.
Ruff, Lisa. IDEAlliance (2004). Articles>Information Design>Government>XML
There are 14 readers currently online: 2 registered users and 12 guests. Register.

![]()
![]()


![]()
![]()
![]()