- From: Karl Dubost <karl@w3.org>
- Date: Tue, 5 Dec 2006 14:33:33 +0900
Le 5 d?c. 2006 ? 11:38, Ian Hickson a ?crit : > On Tue, 5 Dec 2006, Karl Dubost wrote: >> >> 2. When people edit files locally on their filesystem (outside HTTP >> world) and they put them online through FTP (outside HTTP world), to >> finally reach a folder controlled by a Web server (inside HTTP >> World), >> troubles are starting. > > There aren't really any troubles, though, since the problem has always > been with getting people to use MIME types other than text/html, > and here > we're saying "use text/html". they are troubles when servers use another mime type than "text/ html", people do not choose their mime type and they do not know what it is. User X is writing a file like the ol' time home page. Give a name to the file "boo.doc", "boo.txt", "boo.cool". User X uploads the file on the Web server. There are troubles. The only way to fix that will be to have URI management on the server, but still that would mean that the author of pages would be authentified in a Web way and the user would understand the meaning of it. The question comes because it would be interesting to have a mechanism to help to fix the mimetype when necessary. -- Karl Dubost - http://www.w3.org/People/karl/ W3C Conformance Manager, QA Activity Lead QA Weblog - http://www.w3.org/QA/ *** Be Strict To Be Cool ***
Received on Monday, 4 December 2006 21:33:33 UTC