- From: François REMY <francois.remy.dev@outlook.com>
- Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2012 00:11:27 +0100
- To: <public-nextweb@w3.org>
I had the same thoughts. -----Message d'origine----- From: Brian Kardell Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2012 12:03 AM To: public-nextweb@w3.org Subject: The CSS Problem Not sure how many of you saw this exchange today, http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-style/2012Nov/0191.html but I think that this is just more reason for our approach. The problem isn't so much that those features are in CSS - that's good actually... People don't have to learn and use all of them and, in fact, many won't. The problem is that if we had focused on this problem instead, those things could have evolved and iterated, competed, lived/died and evolved without the prefixing problems and without taking quite so much of the limited resources W3C and individual browser manufacturers have, users would be giving feedback quicker, none of their stuff would need break and we could collect real world data about usage to justify native versions. Just my thoughts and I'm going to keep them off that list for now as I don't think we are ready for the conversation it would likely generate :) -Brian
Received on Monday, 12 November 2012 23:12:00 UTC