EPUB Rec track (Was Re: [minutes] 2019-10-01)

First, I apologize for missing the recent EPUB 3.2 REC track 
discussions.  In Fukuoka I was in too many places at once.  And I was on 
holiday for yesterday's BG meeting.

I wanted to add one element to the discussion, which I did not see in 
the Pros/Cons document [1].  This is the element of roadmap which I view 
as an essential element of the REC track discussion. At the moment the 
discussion [1] seems focused on the current spec alone, whereas I 
believe that the REC track decision is heavily dependent on roadmap.  
Let me explain what I mean with three scenarios.

1. Two years ago, the publishing community thought that the roadmap of 
EPUB was EPUB 4.0, a derivative of the work on Web Publications.  At 
that time, I (and I think everyone else), was extremely comfortable with 
doing EPUB maintenance in a Community Group.  After all, in short order 
there would be (the charter thought) a vastly improved EPUB 4.0.  Why 
take EPUB 3.2 on the REC track?  (This is not the current scenario that 
anyone is working on.)

2. Let's assume that we collectively believe that there are additional 
meaningful enhancements for EPUB that we expect to deliver in the next 
three years.  These could be sourced from several directions: (a) 
Sequential arts (manga) requirements, (b) some level of interop with 
Kindle, (c) bringing in some of the audiobooks content into the core 
EPUB spec, (d) bringing in some early Web Publications content, (e) 
natural evolution of the core EPUB 3.0 spec which was already approved 8 
years ago.

If we believe that in three years there is enough meaningful content for 
an EPUB 3.5, then I would not advocate taking EPUB 3.2 to REC.  I would 
prefer to put our energies into the new function.

3. Let's assume on the other hand, that we do not believe that there 
will be meaningful enhancements for EPUB that we expect to deliver in 
the next three years.  Then I would have the opposite view.  I would 
have a hard time believing that we want the flagship spec of the 
publishing community to be out there for so many years: with less formal 
recognition, less testing, less horizontal review, less patent 
protection.   If that were the case, then I would support taking EPUB 
3.2 on the REC track immediately.

Choosing between scenarios 2 and 3 requires coming to consensus on our 
roadmap.  I don't think that this work is done or is being worked on.  
But I think this is an appropriate task for the Publishing Business Group.

Jeff

[1] 
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/17CyIqihtjjzT7Abbcq9sSqLNqLGKs2cuXdg4DcFulGY/edit#gid=0

On 10/1/2019 1:11 PM, Ivan Herman wrote:
> Meeting minutes are here:
>
> https://w3c.github.io/publ-bg/Meetings/Minutes/2019/2019-10-01-pbg
>
> Ivan
>
> ----
> Ivan Herman, W3C
> Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/
> mobile: +31-641044153
> ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0782-2704
>

Received on Wednesday, 2 October 2019 00:42:45 UTC