- From: Albert Lunde <Albert-Lunde@nwu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 19 Jul 1995 08:06:57 -0500 (CDT)
- To: www-html@www10.w3.org
People who think that standards are not important or that we can get by with collections of hacks as "defacto standards" would be well to consider the recent history of gopher and gopher+. As well as having glitzy graphic features, I think the web has had a technical advantage in the form of protocols that have made more use of existing standards and new standization that has unified various features of the existing net. The reason our institution has addopted first gopher and then www was that they offered a cross-platform standard for electronic publishing. (Unfortunately gopher+ was so seriously hacked that it was pretty hard for third-parties to develop effective implementations.) One development team no matter how brash, daring, and inspired can't be the sole basis for a cross-platform standard. I'm not a major figure in the standards development process, but I have been on the working group lists for a bit now. I'd feel better about Netscape et. al. if they did something to introduce things to the IETF working group and get comments before unleashing them on thousands of users or at least before taking them out of beta. Talking to people at conferences doesn't mean as much to me as mailing proposals to the working group mailing list and particiating in the discussions there. As it is, the working group is presented with a choice of standardizing on Netscape's ideas or ignoring them: the large base of users makes it harder to make constructive changes after they have been let loose. In the same vein, I wish Netscape paid more attention to the SGML issues... getting these right is important for standardization. I think the entry of new web browsers from providers like AOL is going to make evident the problems in relying on "defacto standards" and ad-hoc "extensions". -- Albert Lunde Albert-Lunde@nwu.edu
Received on Wednesday, 19 July 1995 09:06:59 UTC