> On Tue, 24 Nov 1998, Joel Maher wrote: > > > > I think Greg has a good point. I would be nice to include the desktop as > > a part of the OS for a personal workstation, but having the choice of no > > GUI is why some people choose linux. > > That's why layered or modular standard with optional higher layers > or modules designed for interoperability rather than for prefering > any existing solution would be a good thing IMHO. >
Yes, modular standards are a Good Thing[TM]. However, something I'd like to *strongly* propose is to adopt an RFC-like concept, where anyone can submit documents to be published; by default to be considered "Informational", but which can be standards-track (Proposed Standard, Standard). That way people who hack up useful things can document them to improve interoperability, without going through an expensive standardization process until it becomes warranted. Having a central repository of such documents is very useful, as the RFC's and the FidoNet equivalent, the FSC's both show. When I was active in FidoNet (1988-1994), more mailers were implemented to the informal standards (FSC-xxxx) than the formal ones (FTS-xxxx), although they all could speak FTS-0001 and FTS-0006 when warranted. I hereby volunteer to be virtual Jon Postel and maintain such an archive, should it be considered useful. -hpa