- From: Phillip Lord <phillip.lord@newcastle.ac.uk>
- Date: Mon, 06 Oct 2014 12:43:41 +0100
- To: Sarven Capadisli <info@csarven.ca>
- Cc: Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>, W3C Semantic Web IG <semantic-web@w3.org>, W3C LOD Mailing List <public-lod@w3.org>
Sarven Capadisli <info@csarven.ca> writes: > I will bet that if the requirements evolve towards Webby submissions, within > 3-5 years time, we'd see a notable change in how we collect, document and mine > scientific research in SW. This is not just being "hopeful". I believe that if > all of the newcomers into the (academic) research scene start from HTML (and > friends) instead of LaTeX/Word (and friends), we wouldn't be having this > discussion. If the newcomes are told to deal with LaTeX/Word (regardless of > hand coding or using a WYSIWYG editor) today, they are going to do exactly > that. I would look at an environment which has less external force. The free software engineering community produces it's documents in a very wide-range of formats. If you peruse github, the key characteristics are, I think: that they are text formats because they are easy to version with source and are hackable; and mostly they dump to HTML. PDFs are very rare these days. It would be fun to see what the most used are. Markdown is a big contender, as we as language specific formats (python and reStructuredText for example). I don't believe that HTML is a good authoring format any more than PDF is. I don't think see this as huge problem. HTML needs to be part of the tool-chain, not all of it. Phil
Received on Monday, 6 October 2014 11:44:05 UTC