- From: Silvia Pfeiffer <silviapfeiffer1@gmail.com>
- Date: Sat, 7 May 2011 09:14:49 +1000
- To: Leonard Rosenthol <lrosenth@adobe.com>
- Cc: Henri Sivonen <hsivonen@iki.fi>, "tmichel@w3.org" <tmichel@w3.org>, "public-html@w3.org" <public-html@w3.org>, "public-media-annotation@w3.org" <public-media-annotation@w3.org>
On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 1:20 AM, Leonard Rosenthol <lrosenth@adobe.com> wrote: > EPUB3 is based on the XML serialization of HTML5+CSS (<http://idpf.org/epub/30/spec/epub30-overview.html>) and as such uses the same UA's (especially WebKit-based ones). In addition, because it is simply a packaging of (X)HTML5 plus associated resources, it can indeed be placed on a server and transparency served up. I'm not going to elaborate this any further, but once you package it with additional resource and give it a different name, you have created a new resource type that is not "just supported" by UAs. It's not Web content any more. *Something* (e.g. a plugin, a Web application) has to unpack it first before handing the individual pieces one at a time to a UA for interpretation. Silvia. > > Leonard > > -----Original Message----- > From: Silvia Pfeiffer [mailto:silviapfeiffer1@gmail.com] > Sent: Thursday, May 05, 2011 6:39 PM > To: Leonard Rosenthol > Cc: Henri Sivonen; tmichel@w3.org; public-html@w3.org; public-media-annotation@w3.org > Subject: Re: follow up on the discussion in HTML5 about metadata access > > EPUB is not HTML, so it does not get interpreted by a HTML UA and > therefore not exposed through the HTML IDL. Even if there is HTML > somewhere in EPUB, you are not delivering a HTML file to the Web > browser but an EPUB file. If you want to interpret EPUB markup in a > Web browser you need a plugin. > > Silvia. > > On Fri, May 6, 2011 at 1:32 AM, Leonard Rosenthol <lrosenth@adobe.com> wrote: >> HTML is a markup language that can be (and is!) used in MANY DIFFERENT areas. To limit it (and it's design/development) to the "Web" is short-sighted and will only lead to interoperability problems in the future. >> >> Leonard >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Henri Sivonen [mailto:hsivonen@iki.fi] >> Sent: Thursday, May 05, 2011 12:37 AM >> To: Leonard Rosenthol >> Cc: Silvia Pfeiffer; tmichel@w3.org; public-html@w3.org; public-media-annotation@w3.org >> Subject: RE: follow up on the discussion in HTML5 about metadata access >> >> On Wed, 2011-05-04 at 16:52 -0700, Leonard Rosenthol wrote: >>> > Right now, all use cases discussed on the HTML WG list were solvable >>> > with server-side APIs. >>> > >>> That is NOT true, Silvia! >>> >>> I raised a number of use cases for non-browser-based UAs - for example >>> EPUB viewers - where server-side was NOT an option. >> >> Why would an .epub book need to be able to introspect its own metadata >> using a script? >> >> As for viewers, if the viewer wants to do stuff with metadata, it can >> implement whatever interfaces it wants for its own private use. They >> don't have to be standardized or exposed to scripts provided by the book >> itself. >> >> (I tend to get skeptical when a Web API is motivated by non-Web uses. >> The W3C has been down that road before. Has it ever been a good road?) >> >> -- >> Henri Sivonen >> hsivonen@iki.fi >> http://hsivonen.iki.fi/ >> >> >
Received on Friday, 6 May 2011 23:18:12 UTC