- From: Stijn Peeters <stijn.p@hccnet.nl>
- Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2007 08:51:17 +0100
Shannon, You seem to have missed Dave's point. The removal of the paragraph mentioning OGG in the spec does not change anything. The spec is a work-in-progress and the <video> tag is still under discussion. As such, the spec has been changed to reflect that no decision regarding this has been made yet. This does not change anything as that part of the spec was work-in-progress anyway. Why would he discuss such an editorial change with the list first? It does not hold any consequences for the final spec. I do not understand why someone would be holding HTML5 ransom over this. HTML5 is more than <video>. According to the road map the final HTML5 recommendation is due in late 2010. There is still plenty of time to discuss the issue and come to a reasonable solution, and while you might find <video> more important than <cite>, <cite> is also something to be discussed. Regards, Stijn -----Oorspronkelijk bericht----- Van: whatwg-bounces at lists.whatwg.org [mailto:whatwg-bounces at lists.whatwg.org] Namens Shannon Verzonden: vrijdag 14 december 2007 8:16 Aan: whatwg at lists.whatwg.org Onderwerp: Re: [whatwg] The truth about Nokias claims > > Ian, as editor, was asked to do this. It was a reasonable request to > reflect work in progress. He did not take unilateral action. Ok, not unilateral. How about 'behind closed doors?'. Why no open discussion BEFORE the change? 4.) What prevents a third party plugin open-source from providing Ogg support on Safari and Nokia browsers? > > Nothing, but if the spec. required the support, the browser makers > cannot claim conformance. The spec did not REQUIRE the support, it recommended it. You've now confirmed that doesn't cause non-compliance. > 5.) Why are we waiting for ALL parties to agree when we all know they > won't? Why can't the majority have their way in the absence of 100% > agreement? > > Because we have the time to try to find a solution everyone can get > behind. It's not as if we are holding final approval of HTML5 on this > issue. There is plenty of technical work to do (even on the video and > audio tags) while we try to find the best solution. Actually it appears that somebody was holding HTML5 to ransom on this issue. Now you've caved in. Now the rest of us are holding it. Touche? Anyway, this is a great idea except 100% agreement is practically impossible. Are you claiming otherwise? > We don't need a vote. That just about says it all, doesn't it? Is this a public standard or not? What is this list? >> 6.) How much compelling content is required before the draft is >> reverted. Does Wikipeadia count as compelling? > > When will I stop beating my wife? Your question has a false > assumption in it, that we are waiting for compelling content in order > to revert the draft. We're not. We're working on understanding. Then what ARE you waiting on (what PRACTICAL thing I mean)? Understanding what? My understanding is perfect. The MPEG-LA is upset with the Ogg proposal. Also, when will you stop beating your wife? (since you brought it up). Ian has claimed compelling content could end this impasse. I do not believe it (any more than I believe you beat your wife). > > As Ian has said, we are going in circles on this list, with much heat > and very little if any new light. Can we stop? It is getting quite > tedious to hear see the same strawmen bashed on again and again. Of course people would like this to end. Some more than others. It would help if those involved in creating the controversial changes would come up with a practical solution but they can't. If would help even more if you agreed to restore the text. And who is blocking the light? Who created the strawmen? Was it Nokia claiming that Ogg was 'proprietary' (conveniently ignoring the fact it is public-domain). You claim 100% agreement is necessary to revoke the change. If so why wasn't it necessary BEFORE the change? The way I see it we are expected to wait for an impossible event. No new protocol can possibly pass the expired patents test for at least 10 years. Are you planning to wait that long to ratify HTML5? I am NOT the villain here. MY interest in this matter is altruistic (as a web developer and user). I do not work for a company with existing commitments to a particular format. If I keep the debate going then it's because the answers given are unsatisfactory. I apologise to the rest of the list but this is an much more serious issue than the format of the <cite> tag to me. Shannon
Received on Thursday, 13 December 2007 23:51:17 UTC