« How I explained Web Services Policy to my child | Main | TPAC 2007 - Let's start »

The Tracker, Tracked

Since W3C launched the new HTML Working Group in March, over 450 people have joined. This is great, but making sense of the thousands of mail messages that followed is too much for any one person. I think the new issues tracking task force is a promising development. The small group of trackers (working closely with the co-chairs Dan Connolly and Chris Wilson) is a valuable complement to the larger set of people participating in the group who write and test code, review documents, and represent a large set of user needs. A richly structured community has a better chance of producing a widely accepted standard.

In every W3C group I've been a part of, it takes a while for the people involved to forge the roles (formal or informal) that suit them, and to start speaking the same language. Only then do they start to get work done. The HTML WG is unique at W3C in its size and makeup, so I am not surprised that the participants may require additional time to establish their own rhythms and rituals for getting things done. The tracking task force is an encouraging sign. Dan explained that several pieces fell into place around the same time, leading to the formation of the task force:

Dan shared a tip that I think will be useful to Chairs of other groups: when W3C launched the HTML WG, he set up a questionnaire for group participants to indicate (among other things) which roles interested them. It doesn't hurt to ask! And then, when the stars aligned and it came time to ask for volunteers, Dan had a short list of candidates.

What comes next? Tracked issues lead to decisions. Decisions lead to changes to specifications (or not). I look forward to seeing how the community's voice, now listened to by perked up ears, shapes HTML 5.

Filed by Ian Jacobs on November 2, 2007 6:31 PM in HTML, Technology 101, Tools
| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

Leave a comment

Note: this blog is intended to foster polite on-topic discussions. Comments failing these requirements and spam will not get published. Please, enter your real name and email address. Every individual comment is reviewed by the W3C staff. This may take some time, thank you for your patience.

You can use the following HTML markup (a href, b, i, br/, p, strong, em, ul, ol, li, blockquote, pre) and/or Markdown syntax.

Your comment


About you

This blog is written by W3C staff and working group participants,
 and maintained by Coralie Mercier.
Authorized parties may log in to create a new entry.
Powered by Movable Type, magpierss and a lot of Web Technology