Lachlan Hunt wrote:
Charles Iliya Krempeaux wrote:
<link rel="enclosure" type="image/xxx" width="640" height="480"
compressioning="lossy" coloring="truecolor" href="A.xxx">
<link rel="enclosure" type="image/xxx" width="1280" height="960"
compressioning="lossy" coloring="truecolor" href="A.xxx">
<link rel="enclosure" type="image/xxx" width="2560" height="1920"
compressioning="lossy" coloring="truecolor" href="A.xxx">

... could become...

<link rel="enclosure" type="image/xxx" metadata="size:640x480, 1280x960,
2560x1920; compressioning:lossy; coloring:truecolor;" href="A.xxx">

For color, you are reinventing Media Queries. For compression, you are basically reinventing q values for MIME types.

<link type="image/png;q=1.0" media="all and (min-color:8)">
<link type="image/jpeg;q=0.8" media="all and (min-color:8)">



Could this be said about size as well?

<link type="image/png"
      media="all and (max-width:16px and max-height:16px)">

Here I'm assuming that "the rendering surface of the output device" as referred to by Media Queries[1] section 5.1 is the rectangle of pixels that the icon is going to be rendered within, which I suppose is a slight deviation from the meaning when rel="stylesheet", but I find it to be intuitive.

[1] http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/CR-css3-mediaqueries-20070606

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