James Clark (XML expert)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Clark, (February 23, 1964) is the author of groff and expat and has done much work with open-source software and XML. Born in London, and educated at Charterhouse and Merton College, Oxford, Clark has lived in Bangkok, Thailand since 1995, and is now a permanent resident. He owns a small company called Thai Open Source Software Center, which provides him a legal framework for his open-source activities.

James Clark served as Technical Lead of the Working Group that developed XML, notably contributing the self-closing, empty-element tag syntax (for example: "<tagname/>"), and the name "XML".

For the GNU project, he wrote groff and an xml editing mode for GNU Emacs.

He is listed as part of the Working Group that developed the Java Streaming API for XML ( StAX ) JSR 173 at the JCP

From November 2004 until late 2006, he worked for Thailand's Software Industry Promotion Agency (SIPA), to promote open source technologies and open standards in the country. This work included pushing the Thai localization of OpenOffice.org office suite and Mozilla Firefox web browser, along with other open source software packages.

[edit] Projects at SIPA

  • Chantra : An open source Thai project with programs for Windows. Like the OpenCD project.
  • Suriyan GNU/Linux : An extremely user-friendly "instant server" system for small and medium-sized companies. (not to be confused with SIPA's new, unrelated project with a similar name, Suriyan Linux Live CD)

[edit] WSO2

James is listed as a director of WSO2.

[edit] External links