In the computer the accessibility the multimedia plays vital role SMIL is used for multimedia presentations that integrates streaming audio and video with images, the presentations that are by SMIL are described as text files the user can create or edit a SMIL presentation by using a text editors, the documents of SMIL are specified by URLS, media elements can be files such as text files, JPEG images quick time movies or live streams. The presentation of the SMIL can be used in any media element that quick time can play it includes audio, video,
The Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language (SMIL, pronounced "smile") enables simple authoring of interactive audiovisual presentations. SMIL is typically used for multimedia presentations that can integrate streaming audio and video with images, text or any other media type.
SMIL presentations are described by text files. You can create or edit a SMIL presentation using a text editor, and you can automatically generate a SMIL document using any script language that creates text files. A SMIL document specifies what media elements to present
On June 15, 1998, the World Wide Web Consortium (WC3) released the Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language Specification 1.0, or SMIL, as a recommendation. SMIL, an XML extension, is intended to allow the easy implementation of sophisticated time-based multimedia content on the Web.
According to the WC3's recommendation, SMIL allows a developer to "describe the temporal behavior of a presentation, describe the layout of the presentation on a screen, and associate hyperlinks with media objects." Because SMIL is a relatively simple declarative