Fwd: Re: Friction and cross pollination [TAG task forces]

If Community Groups had existed in 2007 we might have done AWWSW as one.

As I said before, I think we should probably wind up this group ASAP,
and if people want to continue maybe then create a CG. Sound right?

Wish I had more time to put into it. I'm probably mostly unavailable
until the end of the month. Starting around Nov 1 I should be able to
work on a final report.

Jonathan

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Noah Mendelsohn <nrm@arcanedomain.com>
Date: Fri, Oct 14, 2011 at 2:31 PM
Subject: Fwd: Re: Friction and cross pollination
To: "www-tag@w3.org" <www-tag@w3.org>
Cc: Mike Champion <Michael.Champion@microsoft.com>, Norm Walsh <ndw@nwalsh.com>

Michael Champion posted this to the public-html-xml mailing list, but
it includes some suggestions directed to the TAG, so I'm relaying it
here.

This is part of a larger thread focused mainly on what the draft
report from the XML/HTML working group should say. Suggestion:

* Discussion of the content of the report should remain on public-html-xml

* Discussion of the general issue of having the TAG either create task
forces, or suggest that the W3C create them, should be held mainly
here on www-tag@w3.org.

OK? Thank you.

Noah

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: Friction and cross pollination
Resent-Date: Fri, 14 Oct 2011 16:22:59 +0000
Resent-From: public-html-xml@w3.org
Date: Fri, 14 Oct 2011 16:22:27 +0000
From: Michael Champion <Michael.Champion@microsoft.com>
To: Robin Berjon <robin@berjon.com>, Henri Sivonen <hsivonen@iki.fi>
CC: public-html-xml@w3.org <public-html-xml@w3.org>

> All of these paths are work for other groups, new (community) groups, or
> even just open source projects.

Exactly.  Let's declare victory on this task force report, and suggest
that people who have been inspired by the discussions here but couldn't
build consensus for their additional ideas take them to Community Groups
or some other appropriate venue.

Editorializing a bit Š I think it's time to retire the pattern of the TAG
causing the creation of Task Forces to dig deep into topics that interest
them but they don't have the bandwidth to pursue.  Instead, those people
in the TAG or Team or wider community who see an unmet need or envision a
better solution should propose a community group, see if there is critical
mass to explore the idea, and if the group comes up with a compelling
solution THEN propose it to a WG to standardize.  That will reduce the
number of as-yet unsolvable problems that get put into TF or WG charters
while giving the people with the vision and determination to solve them
anyway a place to do so (or not) unimpeded by the skeptics.


On 10/14/11 2:03 AM, "Robin Berjon" <robin@berjon.com> wrote:

> On Oct 13, 2011, at 19:01 , Henri Sivonen wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, Oct 4, 2011 at 2:34 PM, Robin Berjon <robin@berjon.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> A suggested list of such smaller projects, which may or may not
>>> proliferate best in a standards setting, could for instance include:
>>
>> I'm uncomfortable with naming smaller projects that the TF hasn't
>> discussed previously when the Report is almost ready to be published.
>
> They are really just meant to be suggestions, definitely not endorsements.
>
>>>   € Defining an XSLT and XQuery serialisation for polyglot HTML.
>>> Usage: make it trivial to produce it with a regular XML tool chain.
>>> [ed. I thought that this had been done, but I can't seem to find it
>>> anywhere]
>>
>> I think it makes sense to have a new HTML5-aware HTML output method
>> for XSLT, but I think making it polyglot would be an unfortunate
>> distraction. You can't serialize the text content of HTML script and
>> style element polyglottally in the general case, but it would be silly
>> not to support the output of text content of HTML script and style
>> elements when the text content can be serialized as either HTML or as
>> X(HT)ML.
>
> Sure, I certainly don't think that it's worth trying too hard. But HTML
> output can be improved, and polyglot is likely a good source of
> inspiration.
>
>>>   € Help define an improved, more interoperable, and more usable
>>> version of DOM level 3 XPath for use from Javascript inside an HTML
>>> document. Usage: a number of queries (e.g. for text nodes, or certain
>>> axes) are impossible to achieve with the Selectors API, but using DOM
>>> level 3 XPath is unwieldy at best.
>>
>> How would a new API be more interoperable than the API that multiple
>> vendors already support? Also, big rathole warning about XPath
>> versions.
>
> See the discussion on WebApps about how consecutive text nodes are
> returned.
>
>>>   € CSS Fragment IDs based on XPointer as described in
>>> http://simonstl.com/articles/cssFragID.html. Usage: links that target
>>> fragments more powerfully, in a manner that browsers understand
>>> (http://open.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/01/11/emphasis-update-and-source/
>>> is a good example).
>>
>> Seems out of scope for this TF.
>
> [several times]
>
> All of these ideas are completely out of scope for this TF: we do not
> have the remit to produce a Rec-track document anyway. All of these paths
> are work for other groups, new (community) groups, or even just open
> source projects.
>
> --
> Robin Berjon - http://berjon.com/ - @robinberjon
>
>
>

Received on Friday, 14 October 2011 20:20:31 UTC