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Re: Last Call: <draft-resnick-retire-std1-00.txt> (Retirement of the "Internet Official Protocol Standards" Summary Document) to Best Current Practice

2013-09-05 20:49:19


--On Thursday, September 05, 2013 15:20 -0700 Pete Resnick
<presnick(_at_)qti(_dot_)qualcomm(_dot_)com> wrote:

IESG minutes as the publication of record
   

The only reason I went with the IESG minutes is because they
do state the "pending" actions too, as well as the completed
ones, which the IETF Announce list does not. For instance, the
IESG minutes say things like:
...
The minutes also of course reflect all of the approvals. So
they do seem to more completely replace what that paragraph as
talking about. And we have archives of IESG minutes back to
1991; we've only got IETF Announce back to 2004.

I'm not personally committed to going one way or the other.
The minutes just seemed to me the more complete record.

Pete, Scott,

The purpose of the "Official Protocol Status" list was, at least
IMO, much more to provide a status snapshot and index than to
announce what had been done.  I think the key question today is
not "where is it announced?" but "how do I find it?".  In that
regard, the minutes are a little worse than the announcement
list today, not because the announcement list contains as much
information, but because the S/N ratio is worse.

With the understanding that the Official Protocol Standards list
has not been issued/updated in _many_ years, wouldn't it make
sense to include a serious plan about information locations,
navigation, and access in this?  For example, if we are going to
rely on IETF minutes, shouldn't the Datatracker be able to
thread references to particular specifications through it?  The
tracker entries that it can access appear to be only a tiny
fraction of the information to which Pete's note refers.

   john

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