Resources
Resources provides a directory of educational materials and community-support tools for DITA.
5 Minute DITA Tutorial
This 5-minute Flash-based tutorial introduces DITA Topics, Specializations for Concept, Task, and Reference, and shows how Topics are organized with DITA Maps for publishing to multiple formats.
View the tutorial here.
For your convenience, below are the eight slides used in the animated and narrated tutorial. If you want higher-quality images to use in a DITA presentation, please contact Bob Doyle.
An integrated Web-based DITA solution: Componize and oXygen present “Componize Author”
Is oXygen your favorite tool for authoring your content today?
Art of the short description
The short description is an optional element in DITA, but it has powerful usability implications. Carefully-written short descriptions can help readers more successfully navigate information and locate topics that answer their questions. In addition, the act of crafting careful short descriptions can help writers clarify their understanding of the technical content. This session will cover how the content of the <shortdesc> element is displayed in various forms of output, such as PDF, Eclipse-based help, and Microsoft HTML Help.
Brushing your teeth with DITA: Leveraging relationships to improve usability
Presentation at the 28 May 2008 meeting of the RTP DITA Users' Group by Shane Taylor, Computer Task Group. Originally presented at DITA 2006 by Shane Taylor and Karen Mobley (IBM).
Building DITA Content With the DITA Open Toolkit
Building DITA Content With the DITA Open Toolkit. Presented at the DITA 2007 conference by Guanjun Cai of IBM.
Creating Task-based Navigation with DITA
QuickTime movie of Creating Task-based Navigation with DITA, presented by Michael Priestley of IBM. Includes a "live" demonstration of Task Modeler.
Crossing Organizational Boundaries with DITA
Presentation at the 22 October 2008 meeting of the RTP DITA Users' Group by Colleen Smith, Content Management Information Architect at Teradata Corporation.
After completing a successful pilot project using DITA and a CMS, Teradata's Information Engineering group is partnering with Teradata Customer Services to share and reuse tech pubs content for creating custom system change documents for field engineers. Challenges in this project include:
CTDUG June: "Usecases for Mashup"
Get: DITA content needs data from non-DITA data sources ("DITA as primary architecture")
Defining DITA for Pharmaceutical Documentation
Designing and Delivering Dynamic Training and eLearning with DITA
Presentation by John Hunt at XPubs 2008.
DITA is an OASIS standard for designing, authoring, and publishing
modular information. Its extensible architecture makes large content
sets much more manageable and customizable. (say something on topics,
maps, metadata)