- From: MURATA Makoto <eb2m-mrt@asahi-net.or.jp>
- Date: Tue, 27 Jun 2017 06:39:30 +0900
- To: Bill McCoy <bmccoy@w3.org>
- Cc: public-publ-wg@w3.org, W3C Digital Publishing IG <public-digipub-ig@w3.org>, W3C Publishing Business Group <public-publishingbg@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CALvn5EDE8e9LHfPODD=1fE_p+Zufu4ew4Yxz4yEHY=7-7jSfgA@mail.gmail.com>
-1 Although I think that the charter has to be revised for inviting browser vendors, I do not think that the "a multi-resource ordered collection of related content (aka publication)" unifies the OWP and EPUB worlds. I rather doubt if it is a re-engineering for the purpose of re-engineering. We should rather begin with a thorough analysis of the gaps between the OWP and EPUB worlds, What does the Microsoft team for EPUB say about the gap? Regards, Makoto 2017-06-27 0:39 GMT+09:00 Bill McCoy <bmccoy@w3.org>: > I thought the F2F was very successful but it seemed unclear coming out of > it whether we are in consensus on the ideal scope of Web Publications (WP). > > > > Ivan said several times in the F2F that "this is the Web" but I don't know > that it fully sunk in. So I would like to make a modest proposal for a way > to help us move forward in a focused manner. > > > > I believe that the core gap in OWP that WP needs to fill is the lack of > any definition of a multi-resource ordered collection of related content > (aka publication). As such, I am not sure there is any other strong > requirement for a Web Publication spec. The document outline created at the > end of F2F to me seems to presume a much "thicker" spec particularly > because much of the 2 days of discussion was about use cases for everything > the WG needs to handle. > > > > I propose that a guiding principle be that for WP nothing is needed unless > it is explicitly required for the use cases for online Web publications > *BUT *not required for the use cases for Web pages and Web apps. If > something is not about online distribution through the Web - content hosted > at URL(s) - it should be in PWP/EPUB4 spec(s) not WP spec (“P” in PWP > stands for "portable" not "packaged") If something is applicable to Web > pages and Web apps as well as Web publication it should be a general Web > Platform capability. At least that should be our starting presumption in > crafting the initial WP spec draft. > > > > Thus for WP I am not sure we need anything except a means to define the > collection of content (the publication) and a way to hang metadata on that > collection, plus probably something about identification of publications. > So, for agile development in MVP (minimum viable product) manner, I think > we should affirmatively state that this is the assumption and draft > accordingly. I.e. have a thin starting outline for WP spec, not a thick one. > > > > So by way of example there should be no going-in expectation of a need for > a security section in the WP spec, as *WP is by definition “on the Web”* > so normal Web security model applies. There should be no going-in > expectation of a need to say anything about scripting. Etc. (we can be in > parallel outlining PWP and move things like security and scripting there). > I hate to say it, but there should not be a need to say anything about > accessibility other than as it applies to the new things being specifically > defined in the WP spec. > > > > Maybe we’ll find that we need to relax this… for example something that we > need for publications, both on the Web and distributed via other means, > that while theoretically useful for Web apps and simple Web pages is not in > the cards to get done by Web Platform WG in our timetable. Maybe we’ll > find that some PWP things have implications for WP-level mechanisms. > > > > But these things to me should be well-considered exceptions to our general > expectations. We shouldn’t start our drafting with an presumption that we > are going to be putting things in WP that are logically overall Web > Platform mechanisms or putting stuff in WP even though not directly > relevant for “on the Web” scenarios because we want to make sure it flows > “down” to PWP distribution means. > > > > To me the only significant issue we need to wrestle with now in crafting a > WP spec is whether the means of defining a collection of content is within > HTML, as the privileged hypertext format of the Web, and/or an external > data structure that is independent of content element format, and/or > something implicit (such path elements of URLs) . If we agree on a minimal > approach to WP I would hope that the WG can quickly move on to resolving > this key issue so we can have a straw-man draft spec ASAP. > > > If the WP spec thus becomes almost trivial – that would be something to > celebrate! Not because the other things aren’t very important to the > overall job of the Publishing WG – they are! But because a clean, modular > architecture that doesn’t unnecessarily conflate things that don’t belong > together will both help us get a faster start now, and serve us better in > the long run. > > > > --Bill (not writing here with Team or Readium hat on, just as a WG > participant) > -- Praying for the victims of the Japan Tohoku earthquake Makoto
Received on Monday, 26 June 2017 21:40:07 UTC