- From: Al Gilman <Alfred.S.Gilman@IEEE.org>
- Date: Wed, 28 Jul 2004 07:54:33 -0400
- To: Martin Duerst <duerst@w3.org>, RJ Auburn <rj@voxeo.com>, Larry Masinter <LMM@acm.org>
- Cc: "'Dan Connolly'" <connolly@w3.org>, Dave Raggett <dsr@w3.org>, <www-archive@w3.org>, <ietf-types@iana.org>, <ietf-xml-mime@imc.org>, <www-voice@w3.org>
At 3:03 PM +0900 7/28/04, Martin Duerst wrote: >At 13:05 04/07/27 -0700, RJ Auburn wrote: > >>On 07/21/2004 22:03, "Larry Masinter" <LMM@acm.org> wrote: >> >>> These comments are as much about the general "IETF MIME type >>> registration from W3C recommendation" as they are about this >>> particular registration: >> >> >>Martin: Would you be the person to handle/address the general issues? > >Yes. For everybody's information, RJ is following the procedure laid >out at http://www.w3.org/2002/06/registering-mediatype.html#Planned. >Because he is the first to do so, this is a very good case to see >where we have to tweak that description. I have already made two >additions: >1) Added a sentence "Make sure that this part of the specification > is readable on its own, without the context of the specification." > [for further details, a good example is probably better than a > lot of explanations] >2) Added a sentence "To make it easier for your WG to track comments > on the Media Type section, you may cross-post the comments list > for your specification." > [I want to leave this to the group for the moment. They have to > show that they addressed comments to the IESG, so having that > documented in a last call table may have advantages and > disadvantages.] > >Also, I'm planning to add some pointers to examples to the above >description, once we have them. That should make it easier for >others to do this. > >> > Your translation from HTML to ASCII left out line breaks >>> before heading lines, which made your template hard >>> to read. >> >>If needed I can resubmit a nicer looking version. Let me know... > >I guess that can wait for the next time you send something anyway, >but I hope this will be soon. > >> >> Published specification: >>>> >>>> This media type registration is for CCXML documents as >>>> described by this specification. >>> >>> I'm not 100% sure if this is necessary, but I'd expect >>> if the template were to appear elsewhere to see >>> a bibliographic citation, e.g., >>> >>> "Voice Browser Call Control: CCXML Version 1.0", W3C >>> Working Draft, 30 April 2004, W3C, <http://www.w3.org/TR/ccxml/> >>> >>> Is "this specification" (or the whole specification) precise >>> enough? In some other cases, a single W3C recommendation defines >>> many different data types. Perhaps it would be useful to >>> say, somewhere, e.g., that the MIME type refers to XML bodies that >>> conform to the DTD/Schema referenced in Appendix B and C and >>> interpreted by the rules in the cited specification. >> >> >>Pointing at the schema/dtd sections seems reasonable. How is this for text: >> >>Published specification: >> This media type registration is for XML bodies that >> conform to the DTD/Schema referenced in Appendix B and C and >> interpreted by the rules this specification > >'this specification' -> 'of this specification' > >> >> Person & email address to contact for further information: >>>> >>>> RJ Auburn, <rj@voxeo.com>. >>> >>> Should there be a W3C contact as well? >> >> >>Dave/Max/Martin: Thoughts? > >Adding the name of a staff contact or so might be a good idea. > >> >> Intended usage: >>>> >>>> COMMON >>>> Author/Change controller: >>>> >>>> The CCXML specification is a work product of the World Wide Web >>> Consortium's >>>> Voice Browser Working Group. The W3C has change control over these >>>> specifications. >>> >>> Or perhaps the W3C contact address should be listed here. >> >>Dave/Max/Martin: Thoughts? > >The W3C is 'on the Web', not at a particular physical location. >This kind of wording has been used in some previous registrations, >and should be okay. Actually, Martin, the W3C should come up with something better. This is a detail of the "life after Rec[ommendation status is achieved]" that I am not aware we have laid out adequately. There is a slight problem because the W3C has studiously avoided being a legal entity which could be identified in standard X.500 terms. But if we take the specification http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Member/w3c-wai-pf/2004JulSep/0075.html The document identifies a contact address of mailto:www-dom@w3.org This is standard practice, viz: <quote cite= "http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Contact"> Do you have a technical comment? W3C technical reports include email addresses where readers should send technical comments. </quote> The Consortium has also assiduously avoided promising to answer questions about its utterances, other than that one may post 'comments' in the above manner. Clearly a 'comment' alleging that there is an inconsistency in the provisions of a specification, if read and found to be accurate, may result in something being added to the errata for a document. I would suggest that the 'comments to' email address be included in the contact information provided in a MIME type registration request. As far as identifying The Consortium it should suffice to use the URI http://www.w3.org/ as identification in this context. It would be helpful, but probably not required by the IETF pro-formas, to also allude to the process for change control by a reference to the W3C Process Document identified as: http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Process/ Al >Regards, Martin.
Received on Wednesday, 28 July 2004 08:24:40 UTC