- From: Tab Atkins Jr. <jackalmage@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 24 May 2010 10:11:40 -0700
2010/5/23 Silvia Pfeiffer <silviapfeiffer1 at gmail.com>: > I just came across this thread > http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?p=1397067 and found it a most > interesting read! > Particularly the comment of jiifurusu . > > It seems the subtitling community is developing a replacement format > for ASS with advanced features beyond what WebSRT has. Wouldn't that > show there is a need for an exchange format with advanced features? Not necessarily. It means that people want certain advanced features. It doesn't mean that those are necessary, or that the people developing those advanced features are aware of existing work they can build on, like the entire web stack. We can do a lot with a very simple format that covers all the *necessary* use-cases and can be easily implemented by simple devices, and then expose extra functionality via the web stack's technologies like CSS for the more important devices (that is, anything that can implement the web). This does presuppose a particular segmentation of device needs/priorities, but it's a segmentation that I believe makes the most sense for a modern format, given the reality and increasing pervasiveness of web-based video. > That new format seems to try and cater for high-end needs and lower > end needs. If we have to develop a new non-HTML-like format, wouldn't > it make sense to coordinate with those guys? In particular if the > community that we are trying to build upon by reusing SRT is actually > against extending SRT? Based on that thread, the main argument that community has against extending SRT is that it won't be compatible with current authoring tools. Their advice appears to be to instead adopt a new format being created which will also be incompatible with current authoring tools, though, so I don't know if I can trust their instincts too much. ^_^ (Not saying anything in particular against ASS or AS6, as I haven't looked at them in any sort of detail, but they do similarly appear to be more complex than we want for the same reasons that everything else has been too complex - they build in things that are potentially desirable but not necessary, and which can be done through existing web-stack technology equally well.) ~TJ
Received on Monday, 24 May 2010 10:11:40 UTC