- From: Leonard Rosenthol <lrosenth@adobe.com>
- Date: Tue, 25 Jul 2017 20:20:47 +0000
- To: Greg Albers <GAlbers@getty.edu>
- CC: Laurent Le Meur <laurent.lemeur@edrlab.org>, "public-publ-wg@w3.org" <public-publ-wg@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <A6049160-2D76-487D-8452-70D52B0BB889@adobe.com>
I don’t understand how a user would ever know (or care) about the “bounds” of a WP. Can you give an example? At its simplest, a PWP is a WP that has been packaged up into a single physical container of content (ala EPUB). Beyond that, we still have lots of work to do to understand how (if at all) it would differ from a WP. On the “states” issue, we spent a *lot* of time in the IG trying to use that states model and when we presented it to the rest of the W3C it was too confusing for many as it’s a very complex grid. It’s also not clear whether we actually need all the various differences in that grid given many things going on with the OWP itself… Leonard From: Greg Albers <GAlbers@getty.edu> Date: Tuesday, July 25, 2017 at 3:30 PM To: Leonard Rosenthol <lrosenth@adobe.com> Cc: Laurent Le Meur <laurent.lemeur@edrlab.org>, "public-publ-wg@w3.org" <public-publ-wg@w3.org> Subject: Re: definition of Web Publication Thanks all. Glad to be here and I think, now that I gave the w3c permission to archive my posts, they'll show up here normally. Leonard, good thoughts, thanks! On this though: * “bound” vs. organized: The word bound, to me, feels more like packaging – and so I think we should avoid it for now. But it’s a good word for when we get to PWP I would argue that a Web Publication, whether packaged or not, must have a sense of boundedness. That those boundaries and a users implicit or explicit understanding of them are a key to exactly what distinguishes a web publication from a website. Particularly from a user's (reader's) perspective, whereas yes, I think from a user agent's perspective, it is the manifest. That makes a lot of sense to me. A related question I had for you all was around the distinction between a WP and a PWP. To me packaging is a state of a WP not a separate entity from it. And even in our charter it states the PWP as something that we might define and spec out but that we might not depending on activities elsewhere in the w3c. Shouldn't then our definition of a WP encompass its states more holistically. Online v offline, packaged v not packaged, with everything v only with essential resources, etc...? Thanks, Greg Sent from my iPhone On Jul 25, 2017, at 10:54 AM, Leonard Rosenthol <lrosenth@adobe.com<mailto:lrosenth@adobe.com>> wrote: Greg had an excellent point about curation, so let me try to add that in using a term that we’ve been trying out here (so feedback on that welcome too) A Web Publication (WP) is an intentionally curated collection of one or more Web resources organized together through a manifest and presented to users using Open Web Platform technologies. There were some other things in the suggestion that I didn’t take and I’d like to explain * “bound” vs. organized: The word bound, to me, feels more like packaging – and so I think we should avoid it for now. But it’s a good word for when we get to PWP * “uniquely identifiable grouping”: As we have discussed, identification of a WP is a separate issue so that doesn’t belong in the definition * “reading order”: Having this in the manifest definition, I saw no need to duplicate it in the WP definition. Leonard From: Leonard Rosenthol <lrosenth@adobe.com<mailto:lrosenth@adobe.com>> Date: Tuesday, July 25, 2017 at 1:34 PM To: Laurent Le Meur <laurent.lemeur@edrlab.org<mailto:laurent.lemeur@edrlab.org>>, "public-publ-wg@w3.org<mailto:public-publ-wg@w3.org>" <public-publ-wg@w3.org<mailto:public-publ-wg@w3.org>> Subject: Re: definition of Web Publication Resent-From: <public-publ-wg@w3.org<mailto:public-publ-wg@w3.org>> Resent-Date: Tuesday, July 25, 2017 at 1:34 PM Laurent - good rewrites, but let me play with it a bit… Do we really need the middle sentence? It doesn’t say anything useful (IMO). The first and third, however are good. We can then put it all together as: A Web Publication (WP) is a collection of one or more Web resources organized together through a manifest and presented to users using Open Web Platform technologies. Now to apply some simplification to the Manifest definition: A manifest is structured information about a Web Publication, such as informative metadata and the default reading order of its primary constituents. I’m not thrilled with that since it’s still not clear to me if we want all that stuff (metadata + resources + reading order + ….) in a single “manifest” *or* we will end up with multiple ones (but even then, it may still conceptually be a manifest). Thoughts? Leonard From: Laurent Le Meur <laurent.lemeur@edrlab.org<mailto:laurent.lemeur@edrlab.org>> Date: Tuesday, July 25, 2017 at 11:38 AM To: "public-publ-wg@w3.org<mailto:public-publ-wg@w3.org>" <public-publ-wg@w3.org<mailto:public-publ-wg@w3.org>> Cc: W3C Publishing Working Group <public-publ-wg@w3.org<mailto:public-publ-wg@w3.org>> Subject: Re: definition of Web Publication Resent-From: <public-publ-wg@w3.org<mailto:public-publ-wg@w3.org>> Resent-Date: Tuesday, July 25, 2017 at 11:38 AM The current definition is facing a large set of comments. From these comments, I tried a variant of Matt's proposal: A Web Publication (WP) is a collection of one or more Web resources organized together through a manifest. The content of a Web Publication can take a wide variety of forms, from formal artistic and intellectual works to ad hoc documents and memos. Web Publications are presented to end-users using Open Web Platform technologies. A manifest is the structured information necessary for the proper identification and description of a Web Publication, plus the default reading order of its primary constituents. Laurent
Received on Tuesday, 25 July 2017 20:21:13 UTC