- From: Mihai Sucan <mihai.sucan@gmail.com>
- Date: Sun, 11 Mar 2007 16:55:20 +0200
Le Sun, 11 Mar 2007 15:35:09 +0200, Daniel Glazman <daniel.glazman at disruptive-innovations.com> a ?crit: > Just as a reminder, and I am an old monkey in the world of standards > bodies, a standard body is not only a cool place where friendly geeks > meet, drink (sometimes) free beer, and write standards for the beauty > of standards. > > A standards body is a battlefield, where organizations want to push > THEIR OWN competitive advantage, be the first one to blabla, the best > one to blabla, where they hope to be THE solution's provider when > multiple solutions are on the table because THEY can implement it before > others. I am sure of that. Everyone wants to push its own competitive advantage. That's good, as long as several ones "win" the battle (not only one "wins" everything) - otherwise we would really end having a monoculture. > As a reminder too, the IE team went from /dev/null to A BIG TEAM. Going from /dev/null to A BIG TEAM is sure great, but there's a bit of salt in that: it's disappointing the fact they had no team at all for IE. > Last point, without IE, CSS wouldn't be what it is today. Without IE, > many W3C standards including the DOM would not be what they are today. > I can't count how many clever ideas Microsoft submitted to W3C WGs. I know this piece of web browsers history. Ironically, yes, Microsoft did push many innovative ideas into the Web, and then they abandoned the Web in 2001-2. Probably this is what annoys me most (and others as well): they abandoned the Web, leaving us with a buggy implementations of CSS, DOM, HTML, etc. I find it somewhat "outrageous" to have to spend days (and some spend nights as well) just to make a site work in IE - just because it has a huge market share. It is for *that* reason alone we are most tired of it. And because Microsoft stopped improving IE, more and more web sites continued to rely on the bugs. > Please stop seeing the Great Evil Empire or you won't be able to > sit with them at a standardization table... Agreed. We will have to wait and see what the big team will do for IE.next. -- http://www.robodesign.ro ROBO Design - We bring you the future
Received on Sunday, 11 March 2007 07:55:20 UTC