On Thu, 2009-11-26 at 00:04 +, Richard Cyganiak wrote:
If you choose such a rather broad definition for agent-driven
negotiation, then you surely must count the practice of sending
different responses based on client IP or User-Agent header, both of
which are common on the Web, as
Thanks for the reply Kingsley.
/Kingsley Idehen wrote:/
/Chris Beer wrote:
/
/I think Thomas makes some excellent points.
Is it possible as a group to agree on something akin to the following?
1) Open Data refers to how data is accessed and is primarily a
political/policy consideration
/
Chris Beer wrote:
Thanks for the reply Kingsley.
/Kingsley Idehen wrote:/
/Chris Beer wrote:
/
/I think Thomas makes some excellent points.
Is it possible as a group to agree on something akin to the following?
1) Open Data refers to how data is accessed and is primarily a
political/policy
At Wed, 25 Nov 2009 00:21:04 -0500,
Michael Nelson wrote:
Hi Erik,
Thanks for your response. I'm just going to cherry pick a few bits from
it:
As an aside, which may or may not be related to Memento, do you think
there is a useful distinction to be made between web archives which
On Wed, Nov 25, 2009 at 6:08 PM, Michael Nelson m...@cs.odu.edu wrote:
I disagree. I would say that agent-driven negotiation is by far the
most common form of conneg in use today. Only it's not done through
standardized means such as the Alternates header, but instead via
language and format