- From: Lofton Henderson <lofton@rockynet.com>
- Date: Thu, 22 Feb 2007 08:25:09 -0700
- To: WebCGM WG <public-webcgm-wg@w3.org>
At 02:34 PM 2/21/2007 -0700, Lofton Henderson wrote: >[...] > - the process [1] > - the first bug [2] > - coordination with OASIS process [3] From [3], OASIS has this invariant 4-step process: O1.) TC adopts the proposed errata as a Committee Draft O2.) TC confirms that the proposed errata do not constitute a Substantive Change. O3.) TC submits the proposed corrections for a 15-day public review O4.) TC confirms the proposed errata as Approved Errata. The W3C process is variable, based on "class", but these quotes from [1] seem to fit our case: W1.) the WG "proposes" (meaning?) the errata W2.) "first two classes of change require no technical review of the proposed changes" W3.) That's all? This erratum is a no-brainer, obvious editorial goof. Nevertheless, in OASIS, the steps O1-O4 must be executed, but can be expected to be quick. In W3C, it looks like step W1 involves a WG vote, and then it's done? In step W3, we would change the status from "proposed" to approved in the errata document? So O1 would correspond to W1, and we would work out the timing so that O4 and W3 coincide? -Lofton. >[1] http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/tr.html#errata >[2] http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-webcgm-wg/2007Feb/0010.html >[3] http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/process.php#3.5
Received on Thursday, 22 February 2007 15:25:36 UTC