It may already be the de facto voice platform for the Internet, but this week the Voice XML 2.0 specification has moved closer to becoming an official World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) standard. The W3C, the body responsible for maintaining many of the core standards and protocols at the heart of the Internet, has published the new Voice XML 2.0 specification as a Proposed Recommendation. Used today in many voice-enabled applications, Voice XML 2.0 so far has proven to be a successful and interoperable basis for structured voice implementations.
Voice XML 2.0 Nears Final W3C Standard
Posted by: Jay Lyman February 4, 2004 11:38 AMIt may already be the de facto voice platform for the Internet, but this week the Voice XML 2.0 specification has moved closer to becoming an official World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) standard. The W3C, the body responsible for maintaining many of the core standards and protocols at the heart of the Internet, has published the new Voice XML 2.0 specification as a Proposed Recommendation. Used today in many voice-enabled applications, Voice XML 2.0 so far has proven to be a successful and interoperable basis for structured voice implementations.