Fermato per un #controllo, spezza le #dita a due #poliziotti
https://www.larampa.news/2025/03/uomo-spezza-dita-poliziotti-brescia/
Fermato per un #controllo, spezza le #dita a due #poliziotti
https://www.larampa.news/2025/03/uomo-spezza-dita-poliziotti-brescia/
Don't forget that we're going live TODAY! 🎙🔴
If you haven't registered until now, you still have a few hours left to do it:
https://oxygenxml.com/evs2025-4.html
The 𝗗𝗜𝗧𝗔-𝗢𝗧 𝗗𝗔𝗬 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟱 🎞 𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗼𝗿𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴𝘀 are here!
Join our free live #webinar on March 12! 🗓️🖊️
If you’re facing review bottlenecks, publishing hurdles, or translation complexities, this session is designed to streamline your workflow.
Register here: https://oxygenxml.com/evs2025-4.html
DITA Audio Mecha Review
Singapore's DITA recently launched their latest dynamic driver offering called the Mecha.
Find out how it performs and compares in Nihal's latest review, now published on Headfonics!
Ukraine receives Czech-made DITA self-propelled artillery system
https://newsukraine.rbc.ua/news/ukraine-receives-czech-made-dita-self-propelled-1736938196.html
#newsukraine.rbc.ua
#WarOfAggression #ArtillerySystem
#Ukraine #Armee
#Krieg #DITA #war
#Czech #Ukraine
#WarCriminal
#occupiers #defenders
#перемогаYкраїни
Gli scoppia #petardo nelle #mani e perde cinque #dita
https://www.larampa.news/2025/01/scoppia-petardo-mani-perde-cinque-dita/
Dita Von Teese shot by John Russo | 2015 https://www.girlselfie.com/595726/dita-von-teese-shot-by-john-russo-2015/ #Celeb #CelebPhotographs #CelebPhotoshoots #celebrities #Celebrity #Dita #john #Russo #shot #Teese #von
Where's the lie 😭
#DITA #markdown #techwriting #docsascode
Twenty years ago at IBM, the company's commitment to user-focused content led to the decision to develop a standard way of structuring content for multiple #TechComm channels. Michael Priestley led the effort to create the new standard that became #DITA. A fascinating journey down Memory Lane in this conversation.
#TechnicalWriting #SoftwareDocumentation #Markdown #XML #DITA: "Think about how in Markdown you would ensure that “all our how-to guides must have an h1 title, followed by one or more paragraphs, followed by one or more steps to achieve the guide’s goal”, and then consider how easy it is in DITA.
This is just not really possible today, at least in any popular Markdown-based framework.
There is a path
Bridging the gap between Markdown and structured authoring will require building new tooling and standards. It’s unlikely that CommonMark or any other popular Markdown flavor would consider going in this direction, so we’ll have to create tools around Markdown.
We at Doctave have some ideas about how to achieve this, and have a roadmap on how to get there. At a high level there are a few things we would need:
✅ A parser and template system that is Markdown-aware
❌ A language for describing constraints and rules for your Markdown content
❌ An engine that enforces those rules on your content
We’re already part of the way there!"
PEOPLE: Madonna's Final Celebration Tour Stop in Rio de Janeiro Draws Record-Breaking Audience of 1.6 Million
https://people.com/madonna-celebration-tour-rio-de-janeiro-draws-record-audience-8643456
The show made history as, though the annual New Year's Eve concerts at Copacabana Beach have drawn larger crowds, Madonna's May 4 audience was her biggest ever, and the largest ever for a stand-alone concert by any artist, a record previously held by The Rolling Stones.
---
Music makes the people come together.👏😎
#Madge
#Madonna
#Dita
#TechnicalWriting #DITA #XML #DITAXML #Documentation #InformationArchitecture #StructuredAuthoring: "DITA is defined in its specification as “an XML-based architecture for authoring, producing, and delivering topic-oriented, information-typed content that can be reused and single-sourced in a variety of ways”. Originally developed by IBM in the early 2000s, DITA stands for Darwin Information Typing Architecture. “Darwin” refers to the naturalist Charles Darwin and his theory of evolution, reflecting DITA’s principles of specialization, inheritance, and adaptation.
DITA topics are standalone, context-free blocks of content, with content types kept clearly separate. There are three main topic types in DITA, all of which are inherited from the base topic type <topic>:
<concept>: background information that users must know before using the product
<task>: step-by-step instructions that users need to perform a task
<reference>: product specifications, commands, or other reference material
You create a document by selecting which existing topics should be reused and referencing them in what’s called a DITA map (similar to a table of contents).
Being an open standard, DITA has no proprietary restrictions. But while you’re not forced to buy a specific tool to use it, commercial XML editors have many features, such as visual editing and validation, that make writing DITA content much easier."
https://mastertcloc.unistra.fr/2024/04/26/dita-xml-documentation-reasons/
🔵 Dita ippocratiche congenite e secondarie: cause, sintomi e terapie
👉 Per leggere l’articolo: https://medicinaonline.co/2017/02/28/dita-ippocratiche-congenite-secondarie-cause-sintomi-terapie/
✅ #ditaippocratiche #Ippocrate #dita #mano #digitalclubbin #EmilioAlessioLoiacono #MedicinaOnLine
Bon dia!
Benvingut abril
@failedLyndonLaRouchite I use Beyond Compare for *source* comparison. As a #technicalwriter I author in #DITA which is an xml specialization; nice because I can use the same toolchains and repos as my dev teams.
And BC *can* diff PDFs almost as well as Acrobat (in some cases better), so long as you're ok with it having scraped all the text out of it to do so. Which may or may not be what you want, but in that case, y not just diff the source.
As I possibly need to do soon something with #DITA.
DITA which is based on XML with some DTD is as like as HTML derived from SGML. In fact HTML is a simplified SGML.
I was aware that #SGML was developed at Boing. They invented it for Airplane documentation.
Today I learned that SGML is based on GML: "General Markup Language" from IBM.
But maybe simply "Golfarb, Mosher, Lorie": the #IBM engineers back in the 1960s.