- From: Brian Smith <brian@briansmith.org>
- Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:43:00 -0800
Ian Hickson wrote: > > 9.) Should HTML5 be put back under direct control of the > > W3C now that they have expressed interest in developing it? > > It is "under direct control of the W3C". It just happens that > I'm editor of the spec in the W3C as well as the WHATWG and > I'm editing the two specs in the exact same way at the same > time, and am taking input from all sources while editing > both documents. In the WHATWG, you have the "Chair" and the "Editor" roles, but in the W3C working group, you are only the editor. What happens when the W3C HTML working group disagrees with the WHATWG? Will you edit two divergent specifications? Are you planning to stay on as the editor of the W3C version after it diverges from the WHATWG version? There are a lot of people, including some W3C working group members, who would prefer a HTML 5 specification that is more limited in scope than the current WHATWG specification. The time to produce a final HTML 5 recommendation could be significantly reduced simply by dropping features from the specification that have little to do with HTML. For example, the data storage and networking APIs should be moved from the HTML 5 specification into their own specification(s) and the syntax error handling requirements should be removed in the W3C version. The bias against the XML serialization should also be removed. The WHATWG seems determined to "stay the course" on these issues, but there is (more) opposition within the W3C WG. So, some kind of significant divergence seems likely. Regards, Brian
Received on Thursday, 10 January 2008 18:43:00 UTC