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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Avoding a repeat of W3C XSD - was Re: Is Web 2.0
On Fri, Aug 19, 2005 at 07:28:14PM +1000, Rick Jelliffe wrote: > You would either finish within the two-year deadline, or you would never > finish at all. Under this rule XML would not have reached Recommendation status. Neither would HTML at IETF, nor at W3C. Nor would DOM, nor SGML at ISO... As I see it, W3C XML Schema represents the result of people from very diverse backgrounds agreeing on a set of features they could all live with. The cost of wide adoption is often extra features. There are extra features in XML that were there because some group or groups couldn't live without them (e.g. public identifiers). The standards process isn't about technical excellence. It's about getting things to work together by having as many communities as possible agree to adopt the specification. Of course, this doesn't mean we *want* specs to look ugly, and the specification does need to be implementable! There have been a number of changes within W3C to try and help improve interoperability of our specs in the future, including raising the "two implementations" bar and being more visible about the way we require specs to go through a series of public reviews. Liam -- Liam Quin, W3C XML Activity Lead, http://www.w3.org/People/Quin/ http://www.holoweb.net/~liam/
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