- From: John Boyer <boyerj@ca.ibm.com>
- Date: Fri, 28 Mar 2008 13:20:14 -0700
- To: fantasai <fantasai.lists@inkedblade.net>
- Cc: Bjoern Hoehrmann <derhoermi@gmx.net>, Forms WG <public-forms@w3.org>, XHTML WG <public-xhtml2@w3.org>, Steven Pemberton <steven.pemberton@cwi.nl>, www-style@w3.org
- Message-ID: <OF9B6E05EF.AECCF86F-ON8825741A.006EE1D8-8825741A.006FBBC5@ca.ibm.com>
Hi fantasai, Thanks for the clarification that you are responding to last call comments without the CSS working group's approval of the responses. Please see the process document description of formally addressing issues (http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/policies.html#formal-address). It describes a very different model than the one you explained is being used in the CSS working group. Throughout the process document, and specifically at the above link, it is the group (singular form) that formally addresses an issue, and in particular if *the* group believes a reviewer's comments result from a misunderstanding (as you've implied you believe is the case here), then "*the* group *should* seek clarification *before* reaching a decision." (Quote is from the process document link above, but emphasis is mine). It is troublematic that last call comments are being addressed, whether accepting or rejecting, without group consensus. In the case of rejection, there are many cases where others agree but do not post a comment since it has already been posted. In the case of acceptance, you may be accepting something that is unacceptable to others, or also your way of a addressing the problem may be unacceptable to others on the group. If CSS would like the W3C to start operating under a different policy like the one you described, then the chair(s) should escalate this up to the W3C management and ensure that the new modus operandi is adequately covered in the process document. John M. Boyer, Ph.D. Senior Technical Staff Member Lotus Forms Architect and Researcher Chair, W3C Forms Working Group Workplace, Portal and Collaboration Software IBM Victoria Software Lab E-Mail: boyerj@ca.ibm.com Blog: http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/blogs/page/JohnBoyer Blog RSS feed: http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/blogs/rss/JohnBoyer?flavor=rssdw fantasai <fantasai.lists@inkedblade.net> Sent by: public-forms-request@w3.org 03/28/2008 09:11 AM To John Boyer/CanWest/IBM@IBMCA cc Steven Pemberton <steven.pemberton@cwi.nl>, Bjoern Hoehrmann <derhoermi@gmx.net>, Forms WG <public-forms@w3.org>, XHTML WG <public-xhtml2@w3.org>, www-style@w3.org Subject Re: [css3-namespace] Last call comments from XHTML2 WG John Boyer wrote: > > I've hit reply to the latest in the thread, but this message is in > further response to Bjoern and the thread in general. > > I would like to point out that the W3C process document specifically > states that last call commenters are not required to develop full > spec-ready solutions to the problems they identify. It is the > responsibility of the CSS working group to come up with a proposed > solution and then ask the commenter if they are satisfied. Understood. > I have not yet seen a satisfactory explanation in this email thread for > why the CSS group is choosing to violate the axiom that Steven has > described clearly below (and just as clearly in his last call comment). I've tried to explain our rationale. I think the axiom Steven believes is an axiom of CSS is subtly different from (and stricter than) the axiom that we use in designing CSS. We take backwards and forwards compatibility very seriously in CSS, and those are both principles that we apply in designing new features. But that doesn't always mean every level must either interpret the same code exactly the same or ignore everything associated with it. > What I have seen on this thread is a last call comment being rejected > without the rejection even being approved by the CSS working group (or The last call comment is being rejected. You have raised a formal objection to that rejection, and Anne and I will take that back to the working group for discussion. I don't see any good reason to consult the WG on every comment we choose to reject if the commenter later agrees with our rationale. Which has happened. In this case it hasn't, and you will get a response from the full CSSWG. ~fantasai
Received on Friday, 28 March 2008 20:21:48 UTC