- From: Ian B. Jacobs <ij@w3.org>
- Date: Thu, 20 Jul 2006 08:25:07 -0500
- To: www-tag@w3.org
- Message-Id: <1153401907.18985.60.camel@jebediah>
> DanC wrote:
>
> I still have my reservations, but I'm getting the impression that this
> policy is going to change soonish.
> We're currently considering
> http://www.w3.org/ns/foo
> e.g.
> http://www.w3.org/ns/xbl
>
> If the random years issue is the main concern, I suppose that should
> suffice.
>
> The system administration cost of changing the domain name part
> (http://ns.w3.org/foo or http://w3.org/ns/foo or http://w3.org/foo )
> seems high; changing that looks like more trouble than it's worth.
>
> Issuing yearless URIs to replace existing namespace names also seems
> like more trouble than it's worth, to me, but who knows... the future
> is longer than the past, and if people are willing to do all the hard
> work to work out a transition plan and get it reviewed using normal W3C
> process (last call, CR, etc.), perhaps that's not a bad thing.
Hi all,
There was Team discussion and support today for this amendment to
http://www.w3.org/2005/07/13-nsuri:
1) Namespace URIs in W3C Technical Reports may have the
following syntax (using xhtml2 as an example):
http://www.w3.org/ns/xhtml2
(It is not yet clear that that is the preferred syntax.)
2) Director approval is required for a namespace URI with
the new syntax.
3) We should avoid confusion when using a given shortname
in both /TR/ and /ns/ spaces.
I would be interested in hearing whether there is support in
this forum.
_ Ian
--
Ian Jacobs (ij@w3.org) http://www.w3.org/People/Jacobs
Tel: +1 718 260-9447
Received on Thursday, 20 July 2006 13:25:34 UTC