It has been the intention since the beginning that as the WiaB project moves to apache that the protocol would stay with waveprotocol.org. Admittedly it has been taking longer to migrate to Apache than we had planned. We are actually picking up some steam now. I would highly encourage anyone who is interested to ask to lend a hand on the wave protocol site. However, there is still a lot of WiaB content that needs to be pulled over in to the apache wave project.
~Michael On Apr 30, 2011, at 5:48 PM, ya knygar wrote: > anyone? > i propose to reup the http://www.waveprotocol.org/ > > On Sat, Apr 30, 2011 at 7:51 AM, Adrian Cochrane <[email protected]> wrote: >> Hello WiAB, >> >> As a separate server project manager, I have some ideas (not for version >> 1.0) and questions on Wave protocols. >> >> Firstly, I am not clear how deltas are sent in the Federation Protocol >> (assuming, as I very much hope, it makes it into 1.0). Can someone >> clarify how those deltas are formatted. >> >> Secondly, when I looked over Google's tutorials for the Simple Data >> Protocol and gadgets, it struck me that they could better accommodate >> offline clients, and the Wave This and embedding APIs were highly >> centralized. So I've designed a plain TCP/IP alternative to Simple Data >> Protocol using the same concepts, a simpler standard for Gadgets (which >> does not need browser integration), and a URL scheme (which I think is >> similar to yours) for embedding. Not wanting these to be proprietary, I >> will share them if I get some interest. >> >> Again I am not proposing for release 1.0. I must also say I do not seek >> to insult these protocols with what I said, because they are superb and >> everything can be improved. >> >> Thirdly, I think that there should be a better place to discuss >> protocols, and read up on them, which ideally would be decentralized >> just like IETF and W3C. Again this is no ones fault for not needing it >> at the point, but if there's me and you, it'll be great to have a >> standards organization to encourage others. >> -- >> [email protected] >> >> -- >> http://www.fastmail.fm - Or how I learned to stop worrying and >> love email again >> >>
