- From: Peter C Davis <peter.davis@neustar.biz>
- Date: Sun, 05 Oct 2003 18:02:22 -0400
- To: Patrick Stickler <patrick.stickler@nokia.com>
- Cc: Garret Wilson <garret@globalmentor.com>, www-rdf-interest@w3.org, uri@w3.org
Patrick Stickler wrote: >On 2003-10-03 09:55, "ext Peter C Davis" <peter.davis@neustar.biz> wrote: > > > >>Garret Wilson wrote: >> >> >> >>>Patrick Stickler wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>>But when all one has is a single URI, how do you find out *where* >>>>authoritative descriptive metadata resides, if that URI is not >>>>meaningful to HTTP? That's the problem. If all you have is >>>>uri:foo:blargh how do you know where to go for information about >>>>the thing denoted by that URI, and how do you know that the information >>>>you find is authoritative? And even if you manage to work out a >>>>solution, will that solution scale globally? >>>> >>>> >>>Fine---there needs to be a standard solution for finding out "where >>>authoritative descriptive metadata resides." We can all agree that >>>this is a problem. So? >>> >>> >>Actually, there is a proposal: >>http://www.projectliberty.org/specs/draft-lib-arch-metadata-v1.0-08.pdf >>which uses the DNS and DDDS (http://ietf.org/rfc/rfc3401.txt), which >>solves this in part. >> >> > >It solves it in theory. But until/unless DDDS is as ubiquitous as >HTTP, it does not count as a solution. > agreed. >>In particular URIs whose naming authority part is >>domain-based and a special case for the URN scheme. >> >> >And as I've pointed out, there is no need for DNS+DDDS. One can >accomplish all of the goals set forth for URNs using HTTP. > >C.f. http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/uri/2003Jul/0005.html > > Again, i agree. >>While the approached >>defined was intended to solve more specific issues, it can be made more >>generalized. It is scheme and protocol independant. Whether you choose >>to use HTTP, SMTP, FTP or whatever. >> >> > >Fine. So it is more talented than HTTP alone (maybe) but are those >extra features really needed so much that it warrants the deployment >of a parallel global resolution infrastructure? > > Yes, because one day HTTP gets replaced with FOOP, and you would not want the metadata to instantly disappear as a result. Rather just fold the (more flexible) and deployed DDDS from HTTP clients to FOOP clients. DDDS is not realy a _new_ parallel resolution architecture, it is simply a reuse of an otherwise under-used resource record in the existing DNS. Also, if i have an existing URI for a person (eg mailto:me@here.foo), that i can remember, DDDS allows metadata for that usecase, but HTTP could not, without well-know rules. >>It also allows for multiple >>representations of metadata, so you describe the URI in multiple >>formats. It would, IMO, be an error to assume that for a given >>resource, you may only gt *one* metadata document. >> >> > >If you mean allowing content negotiation in order to get those >authoritative descriptions is different encodings (RDF, N3, XTM, >etc.) sure. No problem with HTTP + URIQA. > > No, i was really meaning using different vocabularies. --- peterd
Received on Sunday, 5 October 2003 18:04:31 UTC