- From: Jon Bosak <bosak@atlantic-83.Eng.Sun.COM>
- Date: Thu, 19 Sep 1996 11:36:12 -0700
- To: w3c-sgml-wg@w3.org
Let's review the basics. This is an activity of the World Wide Web Consortium called "Generic SGML on the Web." Its overall goal is as stated on the W3C site: To minimize the costs of down-conversion from SGML databases and ensure the continued evolution of distributed Web applications, the goal of the W3C SGML activity is to enable Web browsers to receive and process generic SGML in the way that they are now able to receive and process HTML. As in the case of HTML, the implementation of SGML on the Web will require attention not just to structure and content, but also to link semantics and display semantics. In other words, the primary goal is to enable SGML to be used as a medium for the communication of documents from Web servers to Web clients. Important as they are, all other considerations -- ease of authoring, acceptance, compatibility with the existing HTML document base, compatibility with the existing SGML document base, compatibility with existing SGML tools, and so on -- are secondary to this one. Most questions related to this primary goal are technical ones, but there is one key marketing requirement: that browsers capable of consuming generic SGML be widely deployed. One factor that we know has prevented the wide deployment of generic SGML browsers is the difficulty of implementing the complete 8879 specification. The basic goal of the XML effort at this stage is to create an application profile for SGML on the Web that will encourage the dominant vendors of Web browsers to make SGML Web browsers available. Jon Bosak ERB/WG Chair
Received on Friday, 20 September 1996 20:46:45 UTC