Re: draft text for charter

I think that we are not tied up to Thursday, for a call.
I can also do a call on Friday.


With regards
Avneesh
From: George Kerscher 
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2017 06:28
To: 'Charles LaPierre' ; 'Avneesh Singh' 
Cc: 'Ivan Herman' ; 'Deborah Kaplan' ; public-dpub-accessibility@w3.org 
Subject: RE: draft text for charter

I think we wanted it included in the bullited list. I too am presenting at a conference at NFB at athat time.

 

Best

George

 

 

From: Charles LaPierre [mailto:charlesl@benetech.org] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 21, 2017 5:43 PM
To: Avneesh Singh <avneesh.sg@gmail.com>
Cc: Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>; Deborah Kaplan <deborah.kaplan@suberic.net>; public-dpub-accessibility@w3.org
Subject: Re: draft text for charter

 

The last thing I recall is we all agreed that if it was absolutely necessary we could move the couple of sentences 

    Recommendation-track deliverables will contain mechanisms to make Web Publications accessible to a broad range of readers with different needs and capabilities. This includes general WCAG and WAI requirements of the W3C; additional extended requirements will be identified as conformance requirements in the Working Group’s normative specifications. Profiles of Web Publications may be defined with more stringent accessibility requirements.

 

after the bulleted list of requirements, but it made more sense where it was and that if it was moved below the bulleted list then in future revisions it might be removed altogether which we were worried about.  So I believe we thought we should keep it where it was originally.  At least that is my recollection.

 

If we do need a meeting, I can call in on Thursday at the regular time, if needed but would rather not as I would be missing part of the eBookCraft conference I am attending and will be speaking at an hour afterwards.

 

 

Thanks

EOM

Charles LaPierre
Technical Lead, DIAGRAM and Born Accessible
E-mail: charlesl@benetech.org
Twitter: @CLaPierreA11Y
Skype: charles_lapierre
Phone: 650-600-3301

 

 

  On Mar 21, 2017, at 7:47 AM, Avneesh Singh <avneesh.sg@gmail.com> wrote:

   

  Dear Accessibility TF,

  The last discussion on the topic of accessibility text on charter is in the following email.
  I could not recall any explicit agreement of accessibility TF after that.

  May I request all of you to go through the email and the changes.
  If we can resolve on emails it is good, else we should schedule the call on Thursday to finalize it. The charter is moving towards completion so we should resolve it as soon as possible.

  With regards
  Avneesh



    On 7 Mar 2017, at 11:22, Avneesh Singh <avneesh.sg@gmail.com> wrote:

    Dear All,

    I am copying the scope staement from the latest commit of Ivan.
    As per the text, it is looking fine to me. But I also have a concern that if one statement in scope will be out of bullet points like this, then some people will again start process of finding another place for it.
    Thoughts welcome..


  I think your fear is justified; put it another way, that paragraph, put separately, seems to be a bit out of context. I must admit I have a preference, personally, to have this paragraph among the bullet items instead (as originally planned).

  That being said, I am afraid we are dangerously close to bike-shedding.

  Ivan






    2. Scope

    For the purpose of this document, A Web Publication (WP) is a collection of one or more constituent resources, organized together in a uniquely identifiable grouping that may be presented using standard Open Web Platform technologies. A Web Publication is not just a collection of links—the act of publishing involves obtaining resources and organizing them into a publication, which must be “manifested” by having files on a Web server. Thus the publisher provides an origin for the WP, and a URL that can uniquely identify that manifestation. A Web Publication must provide a number of features whose detailed specification is in the scope of this Working Group. While some of the detailed requirements have already been documented elsewhere, the most important and high level characteristics, that must be translated into specifications are:
    • A Web Publication may be portable, and be hosted at some other origin. However, it must preserve information about its original origin and identity, so that references to a portable copy can be reconciled with the original publication, and so that the other origin can make informed choices about how much trust to grant to the publication.
    • A Web Publication may be packaged by having all its constituent resources combined into a single file. The package must include the unique identifier of the manifestation—a Web Publication’s origin is essential information if it is to becomes portable. The act of packaging must be reversible; one must be able to recover the original structure and organization.
    • It must be possible to make Web Publications accessible to a broad range of readers with different needs and capabilities.
    • A Web Publication must be available and functional while the user is offline. A user should, as much as possible, have a seamless experience of interacting with a Web Publication regardless of their network connection. We make no distinction between online and offline when defining Web Publications.
    • A Web Publication, having an identity and nature beyond its constituent resources, will have metadata that describes the publication as a whole. We also introduce the abstract concept of a manifest, which serves to carry information about the constituent resources of the publication. The metadata and manifest will also incorporate information about the sequence and presentation of the content.
    •A Web Publication must provide access to a range metainformation including (but not restricted to): ◦table of content, default or alternate reading order
    ◦security and authentication data
    ◦metadata like author(s), title, unique identification


    Recommendation-track deliverables will contain mechanisms to make Web Publications accessible to a broad range of readers with different needs and capabilities. This includes general WCAG and WAI requirements of the W3C; additional extended requirements will be identified as conformance requirements in the Working Group’s normative specifications. Profiles of Web Publications may be defined with more stringent accessibility requirements.

    With regards
    Avneesh
    -----Original Message----- From: Avneesh Singh
    Sent: Tuesday, February 28, 2017 14:18
    To: Ivan Herman
    Cc: Deborah Kaplan ; public-dpub-accessibility@w3.org
    Subject: Re: draft text for charter





      On 28 Feb 2017, at 06:07, Avneesh Singh <avneesh.sg@gmail.com> wrote:

      Ivan wrote:
      [[
      The Working Group will incorporate accessibility considerations into the
      Working Group's deliverables. Recommendation-track deliverables  will
      contain mechanisms to make Web Publications accessible to a broad range of
      readers with different needs and capabilities.
      ]]

      may be considered to be superfluous in the charter. The reason is that this is a requirement for any W3C recommendation, mainly when talking about user-facing specifications like this. In other words, this does not add anything to what is already a default requirement, does it?

      Avneesh: This is retained from the old text mainly due to the concerns of changing things too much after getting to a consensus on mailing list. This was a concern raised by Leonard in DPUB call 2 weeks ago.




    Yep, you're right, I forgot about this. I was simply looking at the proposal
    text.

    Maybe what we should do is to then propose the whole text, but explicitly
    raise my reservation as part of the discussion next week Monday. Would that
    work?

    Avneesh: Looks as a good plan to me. Accessibility group members can chime
    in if any one disagrees.





      For me, the important point is:

      [[
      ...additional extended requirements will be
      identified as conformance requirements in the Working Group’s normative
      specifications. Profiles of Web Publications may be defined with more
      stringent accessibility requirements.
      ]]

      because it shows that we _may_ have extra requirements and we intend to put these into the spec as well. For me, _that_ is the important point...

      Avneesh: This is the core of the message that we intend to give. There would be requirements that are not covered by WCAG/WAI/ARIA, and we need to work on them in digital publishing working group, to ensure that it is possible to make WP/EPUB 4 publications  accessible.


    Absolutely. That text, possibly with word-smithing, is the essential part
    that, IMHO, MUST be part of the charter.

    I think we are in a wild agreement:-)

    Avneesh: Yes.


    With regards
    Avneesh



        On 27 Feb 2017, at 17:47, deborah.kaplan <deborah.kaplan@suberic.net> wrote:

        I am fine with this text. It's longer than I thought Ivan wanted it to
        be,  but if he thinks it's aan acceptable length I think it's relatively
        clear while also being explicit  about the fact that we will incorporate
        accessibility requirements in any recommendation-track deliverables,,
        and the fact that we will be coordinating with other groups.



      Well… it is a little bit too long, compared to the rest of the charter. That, by itself, may be ok, however (if I play devil's advocate, the following text:

      [[
      The Working Group will incorporate accessibility considerations into the
      Working Group's deliverables. Recommendation-track deliverables  will
      contain mechanisms to make Web Publications accessible to a broad range of
      readers with different needs and capabilities.
      ]]

      may be considered to be superfluous in the charter. The reason is that this is a requirement for any W3C recommendation, mainly when talking about user-facing specifications like this. In other words, this does not add anything to what is already a default requirement, does it?

      For me, the important point is:

      [[
      ...additional extended requirements will be
      identified as conformance requirements in the Working Group’s normative
      specifications. Profiles of Web Publications may be defined with more
      stringent accessibility requirements.
      ]]

      because it shows that we _may_ have extra requirements and we intend to put these into the spec as well. For me, _that_ is the important point...






        My only issue  is the following:

        "The Digital Publishing Working Group will coordinate with the WCAG Working
        Group to integrate accessibility requirements created as part of its
        recommendation-track deliverables into generalized technology."

        I don't think we should be limiting ourselves to coordinating with WCAG.
        I would prefer  "will coordinate with the WCAG Working Group, as well as
        any other  working groups as needed, to integrate …"


      This may be vague, what about "wg-s concerned with accessibility', or something like that?

      Ivan






        Deborah

        On Mon, 27 Feb 2017, Avneesh Singh wrote:




          Dear all,

          A reminder, we need to complete the text for accessibility soon. Please provide your comments so that it can be published with next update of charter.


          With regards
          Avneesh
          -----Original Message----- From: Avneesh Singh
          Sent: Tuesday, February 21, 2017 12:34
          To: George Kerscher ; 'Ivan Herman'
          Cc: 'Deborah Kaplan' ; public-dpub-accessibility@w3.org
          Subject: Re: draft text for charter

          Dear accessibility group,

          After our call yesterday, George has merged the old accessibility text that
          was proposed by Matt with the new text added by Ivan in the branch.
          I will also like to mention that in the branch created by Ivan, the
          accessibility text is placed at more than one places. The first paragraph
          was placed by Ivan in the scope statement, and other part was placed at the
          places where the charter talked about coordination with ARIA and WCAG.
          We are fine with this split, and the new text snippet is the rewrite of only
          the scope statements.

          New text for scope statement:
          The Working Group will incorporate accessibility considerations into the
          Working Group's deliverables. Recommendation-track deliverables  will
          contain mechanisms to make Web Publications accessible to a broad range of
          readers with different needs and capabilities. This includes general WCAG
          and WAI requirements of the W3C; additional extended requirements will be
          identified as conformance requirements in the Working Group’s normative
          specifications. Profiles of Web Publications may be defined with more
          stringent accessibility requirements.

          And following is the text in coordination section:
          The Digital Publishing Working Group will coordinate with the WCAG Working
          Group to integrate accessibility requirements created as part of its
          recommendation-track deliverables into generalized technology. One or more
          pipeline of the requirements will be maintained to manage diverse turnaround
          times of the W3C groups.

          With regards
          Avneesh



      ----
      Ivan Herman, W3C
      Publishing@W3C Technical Lead
      Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/
      mobile: +31-641044153
      ORCID ID: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0782-2704





    ----
    Ivan Herman, W3C
    Publishing@W3C Technical Lead
    Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/
    mobile: +31-641044153
    ORCID ID: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0782-2704







  ----
  Ivan Herman, W3C
  Publishing@W3C Technical Lead
  Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/
  mobile: +31-641044153
  ORCID ID: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0782-2704







 

Received on Wednesday, 22 March 2017 04:04:55 UTC