- From: Cramer, Dave <Dave.Cramer@hbgusa.com>
- Date: Mon, 14 Dec 2015 16:01:26 +0000
- To: Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>
- CC: Charles LaPierre <charlesl@benetech.org>, W3C Digital Publishing IG <public-digipub-ig@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <A45DBE2D-ABCD-4812-90AA-B8FE6937A133@hbgusa.com>
On Dec 14, 2015, at 10:50 AM, Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org<mailto:ivan@w3.org>> wrote: On 14 Dec 2015, at 16:40, Charles LaPierre <charlesl@benetech.org<mailto:charlesl@benetech.org>> wrote: Has anyone read about this before? Looks interesting just trying to see how this fits in with our PWP and archiving. http://scholarly.vernacular.io<http://scholarly.vernacular.io/> and https://science.ai<https://science.ai/> Robin Berjon (one of the co-authors of that paper) has started a W3C Community Group on scholarly HTML: https://www.w3.org/community/scholarlyhtml/ it is still in its early days, but it may be very interesting on long term. Not sure yet how it will fit into PWP. In some sense, it may be orthogonal to PWP in the sense that what it tries to do is to define an HTML profile for scholarly publishing, to be used for particular use cases. These profiles, obviously, would fit PWP, too, but I do not believe it would create new requirements for it. I think of the idea of a "vernacular" itself [1] is quite applicable. Our mission is to use HTML for publications. In order to make such publications more readable, more accessible, and more meaningful, we are likely to use HTML in specific ways. A good example is requiring a nav file. This idea of a vernacular has certainly helped me clarify my thinking on EPUB Zero as defined in the Readme [2] Dave [1] http://vernacular.io [2] https://github.com/dauwhe/epub-zero/blob/gh-pages/readme.md This may contain confidential material. If you are not an intended recipient, please notify the sender, delete immediately, and understand that no disclosure or reliance on the information herein is permitted. Hachette Book Group may monitor email to and from our network.
Received on Monday, 14 December 2015 16:02:03 UTC