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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: Realistic proposals to the W3C?
***********Didier PH Martin *********** On 10/17/00 at 8:05 AM Didier PH Martin wrote: <snip - in a effort to keep this as short as possible> ********** Didier replies: This is an "a posteriori" matter of fact based on the social acceptance of a recommendation. Let's call this a "de facto" standard. It is barely a mechanism to protect the users. ************ <chuckles> I guess this means you agree with me. Please forgive my lack of education.. <snip> (2) Didier replies: There we go. You have something here that help re-enforce the propagation of a recommendation and thus make it truly implemented in "real" application. Great idea!!! Now the question is: Why is this condition not part of the W3C member's rule? Not sure you will have to ask the W3C Members about that. <snip> (3) Didier replies: You probably mean here conformance test suites. To obtain the stamp of approval the W3C members would have to run the test suite in order to check their implementation conformance to the recommendation. If successful, the vendor may keep its W3C membership and put the W3C logo on their product. Did I got you right? If yes, this is an other mechanism that could help re-enforce conformance and provide a help protect the users. Yes indeed but why limit it to just W3C Members. In truth any developer ought to have the right to submit any application for review and maybe earn the W3C logo. Not just members alone. However maybe members could get a free review, where as non-members would have to pay a evaluation fee of some sort. <snip> (4) Didier replies: I guess this is already the case but it does not re-enforce any good behavior form the W3C members. (2) and (3) does. I agree but if you read through number 4 of my suggestions I think you will find I am only refering to "REC"'s. Developers are humans and as such each developer will have his's or her's own ideas and views about any particular "REC" or "standard". Their application may not need all the bulk a standard may require to be included just to meet "standards" As such we need to allow for this. It should be ok to support a "REC" in full or in part. All I am asking is that if you do please let the general public know this about your application and if possible your reasons why. I still believe that if your going to support a "standard" you support this "standard" in full. No exceptions allowed. Any developer has freedom of expression by supporting the "REC". It's that freedom of expression that I wish to keep as open as possible as much as possible. But a "standard" is a "standard" and we all need to follow it. Please consider HTML Strict for a good example. ************* My take: To keep the W3C membership, and if you ship a free or not free product related to a W3C recommendation, this product has to implement and comply to the recommendation in order for the member to keep his/her membership. This simply means to W3C members "Walk your talk" :-). On the other hand, That good behavior is re-enforced when the product has to go through an acceptance test suite to be stamped as "W3C compliant" and thus have the member to keep his membership. Thus, the user may recognize a "W3C compliant" logo and know that this vendor support the recommendation and thus that the document is potentially able to be interpreted on more than one vendor's solution. This implies a power pattern shift from the vendor to the user. *************** Much too restrictive here. Let's limit this to just voting right's only please. Remember every member as paid a great deal of money to join the W3C. They should not lose their seat. They should still be allowed to participate as always, but when it comes to the voting. Those who have met standards should be the ones to vote the new standards in. *************** Now the question is: How many members the W3C consortium would have after 2 years if these conditions where the basic requirements? Does the big guys (Sun, Oracle, Microsoft) would still be members? OK Let's finish this on these open questions and let us ask, why these conditions are not there yet. My own opinion is that the W3 consortium has been quite efficient to produce recommendations but not necessarily very efficient to put in place mechanisms to get them implemented (or compliant). In fact, this community seems to be more efficient, as a group, to put some pressure on vendors for conformance. Thus, this group represents the interest of the users, W3C represents the interest of the vendors - the guys financing the W3C. ***************** Well it seems to me, but perhaps I maybe wrong but I believe since the big guys like to set the standards anyway then they should by all rights encourage such a policy. In early days I can easily see where this sort of policy in the W3C would be harmful to the growth of the W3C. But today the W3C is a mature organization. I think the members and the organization can easily see the advantages of becoming standards compliant. Both Microsoft and Netscape are both working very hard to ensure their products are up to W3C "REC"'s at least from my view point. I am wrong?? If I am then one can hope. ********** A positive note about W3C. At least now we can debate about a public recommendation. Not long ago we could only buy products and updates. So, now we have to find the right power balance between the interest of the users and those of the vendors trying to make a living. Cheers Didier PH Martin *********** Well the nice thing is that the market place always determines the winner. Is this not so?? Cavre
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