Liquid Technologies Ltd, are pleased to announce that we will be supporting the OASIS XML Catalogue standard. This will make it possible to make use of the Liquid XML Studio package along with OASIS specifications that make use of XML Catalogues most notably DITA and DocBooks. This upgrade will be in Liquid XML Studio 2012 Service Pack 1, due for release in May 2012. We will update you as soon as the Service Pack is released.
Archive - 2012
In pursuit of the ultimate techCom information architecture
Questions and answers about SeSAM and trends in the technical communication industry
Blog entry: Submitted by Jonatan Lundin on Wed, 2012-05-23 07:21.
This blog post lists a number of questions asked by a technical communicator about SeSAM, trends in the technical communication inudstry and problems end users are facing when using technical documentation. Below you will find my answers.
Have you applied the SeSAM principles in documenting? What were your success points and what was the downside.
Liquid XML Studio 2012 To Support DITA
News: Submitted by liquidxml on Thu, 2012-05-17 11:26. Last updated on Thu, 2012-05-17 12:57.
[WEBINAR] Automating RoboHelp to DITA conversions using Stilo Migrate
Event: Submitted by helen_owens-pope on Mon, 2012-04-30 22:36.
Location:
https://stilo.webex.com/stilo/j.php?ED=165822792&RG=1&UID=0&RT=MTgjMjE%3DDate:
8 May 2012 - 15:00Event Type:
WebinarMigrating PDF to XML & DITA ... much cheaper than you think
Event: Submitted by RobinShobbrook on Mon, 2012-04-23 09:50. Last updated on Mon, 2012-04-23 12:43.
Location:
WebinarDate:
2 May 2012 - 15:00 - 16:00Event Type:
WebinarDITA for Practitioners Volume 1: Architecture and Technology
Resource: Submitted by rlhamilton on Wed, 2012-04-18 20:23. Last updated on Wed, 2012-04-18 20:26.
Eliot Kimber has just published DITA for Practitioners Volume 1: Architecture and Technology, which is the first of two books he is publishing about the DITA standard. Volume 1 begins with a hand-on explanation of end-to-end DITA processing that will get you up and running fast, followed by an overview of the DITA architecture.
Inside the Book: