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Did you know? W3C has won several Emmy Awards.

For its work to make online videos more accessible with captions and subtitles, W3C received a 2016 Emmy Award. For its work to standardize a Full TV Experience on the Web, W3C received a 2019 Emmy Award. And for its work standardizing font technology for custom downloadable fonts and typography for web and TV devices, W3C received a 2021 Emmy Award. #aboutW3C

w3.org/about/press-media/#awar…

Als Antwort auf Coarse Hawk

@coarsehawk That's not the W3C Team exactly (there are women on the W3C Team).

The people in that photo are from the Web Fonts WG (those Members whom their companies were will willing to send for the event). Mind you, these are Engineering Emmys so a rather gender-skewed pool. For our first Emmy we did have at least one woman attend: w3.org/2016/01/Emmy/CCP_6915-Y…

Als Antwort auf World Wide Web Consortium

@coarsehawk Do you have any plans to adopt policies that would encourage member companies to send at least one woman in aggregate to events like these going forwards? As a woman in STEM it's deeply disappointing to see the gender gap continuously reified like this.
Als Antwort auf World Wide Web Consortium

This is great!
Captions are important for literacy! Growing up, I would always ask my parents to turn them on.
As a parent, I strive for subtitles on my kids' videos. I learned about different file formats and editors. I placed captions on a few of their favorite videos, learning how to time appearance and size of lines. It's a craft!

PBS has made their own caption converter tool for #python , which has helped me so much:
github.com/pbs/pycaption

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