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- To: "Simon St.Laurent" <simonstl@simonstl.com>,<xml-dev@lists.xml.org>
- Subject: RE: [xml-dev] Expertise and Innovation - was Re: [xml-dev] Non-Borg servers can authenticate Borg clients (Was Re: [xml-dev] Re: Cookies at XML Europe 2004 -- Call for Participation)
- From: "Joshua Allen" <joshuaa@microsoft.com>
- Date: Mon, 12 Jan 2004 13:13:33 -0800
- Thread-index: AcPZTcn2CTrzD5HqRtyLuxXps8bn4QAAFCqQ
- Thread-topic: [xml-dev] Expertise and Innovation - was Re: [xml-dev] Non-Borg servers can authenticate Borg clients (Was Re: [xml-dev] Re: Cookies at XML Europe 2004 -- Call for Participation)
> >I consider
> >the flip-flops between URI/URL, "Universal"/"Uniform" to be politics
> >that do not invalidate the significance of the concept as it will
> >ultimately be proved IMO.
>
> You're welcome to do so.
Yes, since the point of discussion is about the novelty (or some argue,
lack of) in what TimBL did, I will point to the original "Universal
Resource Identifier" draft:
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1630.html
This RFC, in 1994, represents a revolution. This RFC, and the thinking
which went into it, changed the world*. It's the reason that TimBL is
knighted. By the time the 1998 draft was released, the world had
already been changed, and bickering about "universal" vs. "uniform" was
no longer something that would make or break the web.
* this RFC, *and* widespread TCP/IP, HTML, a killer app from NCSA, etc.,
etc.
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