- From: Silvia Pfeiffer <silviapfeiffer1@gmail.com>
- Date: Sun, 30 Dec 2007 17:41:13 +0100
The spec is not finalised and the a/v baseline codec question is one of the open questions. As exerience from the W3C video workshop shows, all involved parties want to find a solution for a baseline codec that can actually be mandated. I am confident that the new year will see us solve this problem with a royalty-fee codec that is acceptable to everybody, however, it will take time and a lot of discussions. Flamewars won't help (not that this thread is one, but we have had a few threads that were pretty close to a flamewar). I am expecting progress from technical and legal discussions, possibly in small expert groups. This is a hard problem, but people are working on it. Best Regards, Silvia. On Dec 29, 2007 8:19 PM, Henry Mason <hmason at mac.com> wrote: > > On Dec 29, 2007, at 12:01 PM, Philip Parker wrote: > > > The removal of ogg as a baseline for audio/video implementation > > strikes me as ridiculous. Theres nothing stopping other formats from > > being used after all > > If the specification included the Ogg baseline and few web browsers > actually supported it, what use would the specification be? Simply > specifying it won't actually make it widely implemented. > > There's also nothing stopping you from using Ogg in the things you > develop right now, so how does the removal change what you choose to do? > > > As things stand with how easily large corporations can > > obstruct/corrupt the process for their own goals, I might as well just > > stick to xhtml1 and avoid rich media elements where possible in any > > site I may end up developing until - and indeed if sense prevails. > > I guess by "rich media elements" you also mean JPEG, GIF, PNG, SVG, > and Flash? None of those are included as baselines in the XHTML1 > specification either. > > -Henry > >
Received on Sunday, 30 December 2007 08:41:13 UTC