- From: Garret Wilson <garret@globalmentor.com>
- Date: Mon, 19 Nov 2001 13:08:07 -0800
- To: "xml-dev list" <xml-dev@lists.xml.org>
- Cc: "www-xml-packaging list" <www-xml-packaging@w3.org>
xml-dev Members (and www-xml-packaging members, who have seen very early versions of this specification), As a member of the Open eBook Forum (OEBF) ( www.openebook.org ), my company has been working on ways to package eBook material such as XML documents, stylesheets, metadata, images, sound files, etc. The original OEB packaging method, introduced in the Open eBook Publication Structure 1.0, was very specific to eBooks. As the OEBF works on OEBPS 2.0, we're realizing that a more generalized packaging mechanism is necessary. This is consistent with the aims of the W3C Packaging Working Group formed several years ago, which never received enough interest to be able to sustain its work. The use cases of an XML-based packaging format include: * Specifying which resources might be bundled and transported together. * Specifying which resources are stylesheets of XML documents, and doing so *outside* the actual XML document to which the style is being applied. * Specifying metadata of a resource. * Indicating alternate resources for fallbacks (i.e. different image resolutions, unsupported types). * Specifying how resources should be relationally organized for later retrieval. * Specifying the content type, Unicode code points, and other information about a resource. The OEB Publication Structure Working Group has decided to create a new packaging format for use in OEBPS 2.0. Instead of simply extending our old package format, we're creating a new generalized packaging format, currently named XPackage. The OEBPS 2.0 package will be an application of the more general XPackage. Realizing that many items that need to be specified in a package are in essence metadata, we were able to leverage the W3C Resource Definition Framework for a package description. The current XPackage draft uses a subset of the RDF model and syntax. This means that an RDF processor can process an XPackage instance in the same way it processes RDF/XML Dublin Core and other RDF-based metadata, resulting in a consistent interlinking graph of all package resources and their properties. The current XPackage draft, which I'll be attaching to a separate e-mail, is nearing feature-completeness but has not been through a rigorous round of editing and wordsmithing. The OEB PS WG is only now beginning to discuss the specific property and serialization aspects of XPackage, but we expect it to follow the framework present in the current draft. The OEB Publication Structure Working group values any comments you may have about our current XPackage draft, and we would welcome anyone who wants to participate more closely with the OEBF as we complete this specification. Sincerely, Garret Wilson President, GlobalMentor, Inc. Member, Open eBook Forum
Received on Monday, 19 November 2001 16:08:25 UTC