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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: It's time for practical XML!
James Robertson wrote: > > Hi all, > > I've just finished another couple of hours > wading through XML-DEV and XML-L, and I > confess my frustration has overtaken me. I'm sorry about your frustration, but my experience has been that mailing list diatribes seldom spur much action. > It's time to stop writing standards. > I don't want to know about any more > *ML languages, however elegant they > are. I thought that it was widely agreed that one of XML's most exciting applications is inter-organization standardization. It seems incredible that we would do all of the hard work required to build an infrastructure for that (XML 1.0) and then not actually create the inter-organization interchange specifications. Surely interchange is XML's killer app (oops!). And you can't get interchange with XML 1.0 alone. > We are now at the stage where > new standards are being submitted > faster than old ones are being finalised. Most of these are not new standards. There isn't a single *ML in the list of working drafts. They are W3C notes. They are trial balloons. They are ideas. We cannot outlaw people having ideas, and frankly I don't want to. "Chaos is the engine." -- Len Bullard. > What we all need is: [Software, software, software] How do XML-DEV discussions prevent the creation of this software? Most XML-DEV descussions are about people who are new to XML (or sometimes very experienced) trying to figure out how to apply it to their business problems: about expanding the user base: expanding the market for the tools you describe. For instance the recent topic maps and public identifiers discussion is about expanding the market by making *ML applicable to huge library catalogs. "All of the libraries in the world" -- just a tiny little market that Steve happens to think is worth pursuing. > Most of these solutions need to be commercial, > with support, documentation, upgrade plans, > bug-fix releases. Business will not use unsupported > freeware, That's not true. Show me a business that is not using Apache, Perl, Python, sendmail or some JVM and I'll show you a business that deserves to fail (and probably will). I work with massive companies that happily use Python, Perl, Jade and SP. In fact, I wouldn't know HOW to sell a solution that didn't involve SP somehow. > and they _will_ pay for the tools they > need. But that is true. > To them I say: Please, please, stop writing new > specs, and help us all by writing real apps. People write specs to try and understand their problem domain and to share that understanding with other people. If you understand yur problem domain well enough to know exactly what code needs to be written, then you are the logical person to write it! That's what I'm doing. (but sorry, I'm going to release my software for free, not sell it) Paul Prescod - http://itrc.uwaterloo.ca/~papresco Bart: Dad, do I really have to brush my teeth? Homer: No, but at least wash your mouth out with soda. xml-dev: A list for W3C XML Developers. To post, mailto:xml-dev@i... Archived as: http://www.lists.ic.ac.uk/hypermail/xml-dev/ To (un)subscribe, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; (un)subscribe xml-dev To subscribe to the digests, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; subscribe xml-dev-digest List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (mailto:rzepa@i...)
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