On Mon, May 4, 2015 at 12:59 PM, Florian Bösch <pya...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Mon, May 4, 2015 at 8:06 PM, Eric Rescorla <e...@rtfm.com> wrote: >> >> I'm going to refer you at this point to the W3C HTML design principles of >> priority of constituencies >> (http://www.w3.org/TR/html-design-principles/#priority-of-constituencies >> ). >> >> "In case of conflict, consider users over authors over implementors over >> specifiers over theoretical purity. In other words costs or difficulties to >> the user should be given more weight than costs to authors; which in turn >> should be given more weight than costs to implementors; which should be >> given more weight than costs to authors of the spec itself, which should be >> given more weight than those proposing changes for theoretical reasons >> alone. Of course, it is preferred to make things better for multiple >> constituencies at once." >> >> Again, we're happy to look at ways to ease this transition, but right now >> you're not offering any. >> > You've set out on a course that leaves no room to offer any. You're going > to break things. You've decided to break things and damn the consequences. > You've decided to synchronize breaking things so that users have no UA to > flee to. And you've decided to hide your breaking of things so that the > shitstorm isn't going to come all at once. You're trying to delegate the > cost to fix things you broke for users, to authors, which in many cases > cannot burden that cost, even if they wanted to. > > I, as an author, tell you that this isn't going to go over smoothly. In > fact, it's going to go over pretty terribly badly. Coercing everybody to > conform with your greater goal (tm) from a situation where many cannot > comply always does. > Thanks for clarifying that you're not interested in engaging at a technical level. Feel free to flame on. -Ekr _______________________________________________ dev-platform mailing list dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform