@evan I'm also curious about that as there is a lot of backlog, so to speak, that can go into a Vol2. I recently wrote about that in my W3C TAG nominee statement: https://www.w3.org/2024/10/tag-nominations#sc
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Some people talk about "The Winds of Winter" or "Duke Nukem Forever" but I've been waiting almost 20 years for The Architecture of the World Wide Web, Volume Two. -
Long overdue update - no, really, since 2015 - to the dokieli homepage:https://dokie.li/Long overdue update - no, really, since 2015 - to the dokieli homepage:
https://dokie.li/Source: https://git.dokie.li/
The project board is now "open for business":
https://github.com/orgs/dokieli/projects/and for starters we have our @nlnet project up reflecting our MoU:
https://nlnet.nl/project/Dokieli/which we are very grateful for!
Eager to know what you all think and feedback is welcome. We are improving things as we go.
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#Fediverse:@smallcircles I don't really see the fundamental or significant difference. They both impose constraints on expression either by way of the protocol or information structure. Useful for what's intended. (They don't strictly model real-life. No one really says "send me regular updates about your life activities", but the equivalent in person: "what's up?")
If comparison makes sense, good ol' blogging is generally broader on what can be communicated.
Human- and machine-readability being equal.