W3C UK and Ireland Regional Office logo W3C UK and Ireland Regional Office

Leading the Web to its Full Potential...

The W3C UK and Ireland Regional Office is hosted by the CCLRC at its Rutherford Appleton Laboratory near Oxford.

The Council of the Central Laboratory of the Research Councils (CCLRC) is a UK government research organisation that provides access to large facilities for UK science and technology research. It is responsible for access from the UK to several international facilities (e.g. ESRF and ILL in Grenoble, France) as well as its own facilitiess at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxfordshire (which also runs the Chilbolton Observatory in Hampshire) and the Daresbury Laboratory in Cheshire. The facilities include the world's most powerful pulsed laser beam, the world's most powerful pulsed neutron and muon source, and a synchrotron radiation source of ultraviolet light and X-rays - for research in materials structure and interaction.

Nobel prizes have been awarded to CCLRC facility users for work using the synchrotron (1997 John Walker, Chemistry, F1 ATP Synthase structure) and neutron (1996 Sir Harold Kroto, Chemistry, crystal structures of carbon buckyballs) facilities, as well as previous facilities including the Daresbury Tandem Accelerator (1988 Robert Huber, Chemistry, determination of the three-dimensional structure of a photosynthetic reaction centre).

In order to operate world class science facilities, the CCLRC provides an exceptional information techology infrastructure so that users throughout the world can collaboratively design and steer experiments, as well as access, model and visualise data in a secure environment. Historically, RAL hosted the world's most powerful computer in 1964; the most powerful computer, and the first non-US computer, connected to the ARPAnet (now the Internet) in 1973; and hosted one of the first 50 web sites in the world in 1992. Today's IT infrastructure includes a 1 petabyte datastore as a CERN LHC Tier 1 regional center, 1Gb/s network connections to each site, a world top 20 supercomputer (HPCx) hosted at the Daresbury Laboratory and the UK national Grid service for e-science. In order to maintain such an infrastructure which is both secure and open to interoperate with the hundreds of institutions that use our facilities, CCLRC undertakes an active IT research and standardisation programme to ensure that commercial products are competitively available at commodity prices to meet our requirements.

Photograph of Michael Wilson Michael Wilson (M.D.Wilson@rl.ac.uk ) is the Manager of the UK and Ireland Regional Office (w3c-ral@inf.rl.ac.uk).
Photograph of Brian The deputy manager for the UK and Ireland Regional Office is Dr Brian Matthews (b.m.matthews@w3.org).

CCLRC and W3C

CCLRC has been involved in Web technology, and its open standardisation, since its first appearance. In 1992 CCLRC RAL was among the first 50 sites in the world to host a web server. In 1994, when the interoperability of the Web was under threat from commercial interests, CCLRC were active in the establishment of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) to facilitate common standards for the Web to be used by manufacturers in order to meet user requirements, and was one of the first 20 members.

In 1997 CCLRC established the first national office of W3C as the W3C UK and Ireland Office which it still hosts in order to encourage adoption of W3C recommendations. The most significant impact of this encouragement has been in the inclusion of W3C recommendations in the UK Government Interoperability Framework by the Office of the e-envoy in the Cabinet Office, to ensure their adoption by UK public sector bodies. Additionally, the Disability Commissioner who has responsibility to implement the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (PartIII) that includes Web accessibility has considered the W3C Accessibility guidelines as a standard for interpreting that legislation. CCLRC is a member of the ERCIM EEIG which has acted as the European host for W3C since 2002, being responsible for all W3C activity in Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

In addition to promoting W3C recommendations to facilitate the interoperability of the Web, CCLRC has also initated the development of several technical recommendations themselves: PNG as a standard for bitmap graphics that is not encumbered by patents; SVG as a standard for vector graphics; SMIL as a standard for integrating multimedia over the web; and most recently SKOS as a representation for term lists and thesauri.


The W3C UK and Ireland Regional Office is hosted by the CCLRC (Rutherford Appleton Laboratory), with support from the European Commission.

CCLRC logo CEC


Last updated 17th August 2006

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