[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Edd Dumbill on SVG
I commend to you Edd's XML.com article on SVG for a description of how XML "standards" CAN be done properly. http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2001/09/12/svg.html First, it emphasizes the importance of clear prose: "It starts with a useful Concepts section that explains the key points and motivations behind SVG. The specification itself is beautifully formatted, comprehensively hyperlinked, and filled with examples. In addition, it is also very well indexed and useful as a reference, both for SVG processor implementers and those wishing to create SVG diagrams in XML." Second, it recognizes the value of "we shall ship no spec before its time" (to paraphrase Orson Welles' old wine commercial): "Another encouraging feature of SVG is that it has had significant implementation experience during its development, which appears to have been highly beneficial to the Working Group. This has resulted in a commercial vendor, Adobe, with software support for the specification already in its third public release cycle." Third, the SVG WG (unlike most other W3C groups, the DOM being the notable exception in my biased opinion) accepts the proposition that one size does NOT fit all: "The Web is increasingly no longer limited to the traditional PC. There's a significant emerging constituency of devices with limited display size: PDAs and cell phones... Indeed, the mobile and PDA use cases have been identified by the SVG Working Group, which proposed two profiles of SVG, Basic and Tiny, as part of SVG 1.1/2.0." Unfortunately, as Edd points out, a couple of key client-side vendors (one of whom is quite vocal in promoting "standards" when they suit its own strategic purposes) have shown little interest in supporting SVG. We can only hope that its use cases for mobile devices help it find a niche, or ... (taking another toke off the hookah <grin>) ... that maybe SVG will provide a way for the niche browsers to strike a few blows against the empire and get some healthy competition going again in that market. Am I smoking (metaphorical) dope here, or does SVG almost make one believe that there is hope for the XML world after all?
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