- From: Koji Ishii <kojiishi@gluesoft.co.jp>
- Date: Tue, 15 Oct 2013 08:23:46 -0400
- To: John Daggett <jdaggett@mozilla.com>, Asmus Freytag <asmusf@ix.netcom.com>
- CC: MURATA Makoto <eb2m-mrt@asahi-net.or.jp>, "www-style@w3.org" <www-style@w3.org>, "public-i18n-cjk@w3.org" <public-i18n-cjk@w3.org>
> From: John Daggett [mailto:jdaggett@mozilla.com] > > Asmus Freytag wrote: > > Seems to me that a measure of "how bad" and "how probable" the > > occurrences of such "undefined" behavior are in realistic scenarios > > should figure into the discussion. John points out correctly that > > fallbacks do have various kinds of costs in this instance, so one > > would like to see them at the minimum offset, if not dwarfed by the > > expected benefits. > > Exactly! As Makoto pointed out in another branch of this thread, we're looping here. 1. UTR50 says method A. 2. John thinks it costs high, method B costs much less with minimal-to-no impacts. 3. A group thinks the cost isn't high, and the benefit wins over the cost. 4. Another group thinks method B costs more than A due to their architectural design. 5. In response to #3 and #4, the discussion goes back to #2. The costs vary by their designs, and the benefits vary by their businesses and markets, so it makes sense to me that different people says differently on cost-benefit balances. I hope we're smart enough not to require voting to break this infinite loop, but I can't find how. Any advices? /koji
Received on Tuesday, 15 October 2013 12:23:31 UTC