.epub has a number of serious faults of its own, that are starting to be
experienced as people are playing with it in wake of the iPad stuff.  It's
basically a dead end repackaging of an old HTML spec, and it has nobody
working on getting it up to date, or working on it at all.

On Thu, Mar 11, 2010 at 8:13 AM, Richard Shockey <[email protected]> wrote:

> My my it must be springtime! Time for our annual food fight ritual of ASCII
> in RFC's.
>
> Actually I was thinking that the IETF should approach the International
> Digital Publishing Forum with the thought that they consider making the
> .epub format an IETF standard.  .epub is getting considerable traction and
> I've personally found it to useful to convert some RFC's into .epub for
> storage on my Amazon kindle and soon to have iPad.  You have to use desktop
> Stanza to convert again to the Kindle native format but this permits the
> document to be read and more important the fonts to be adjusted on the
> display for those of us with increasing issues with 10 point type.
>
> http://www.openebook.org/
>
>
>
> I do get the arguments in favour of ASCII, though I think there are
> some pretty serious countervailing arguments (like, for instance, that
> we can't spell many contributors' names, to take an easy one).  But
> the RFC format _is not_ plain ASCII.  Just ask anyone whose draft has
> failed the increasingly stringent and lengthy list of IDNits tests due
> to bad pagination in their I-D.
>
> Best,
>
> A
>
> --
> Andrew Sullivan
> [email protected]
> Shinkuro, Inc.
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