Under the first heading of "Fidonet Reference Library" on ftsc.org, I
see numerous FSC's listed. I would be obliged if someone could tell
me if these documents are standards, proposals or what, thanks.
Under the first heading of "Fidonet Reference Library" on ftsc.org,
I see numerous FSC's listed. I would be obliged if someone could
tell me if these documents are standards, proposals or what,
thanks.
Under the first heading of "Fidonet Reference Library" on ftsc.org, I
see numerous FSC's listed. I would be obliged if someone could tell
me if these documents are standards, proposals or what, thanks.
Hello Martin,
On Wednesday December 30 2020 12:57, you wrote to All:
Under the first heading of "Fidonet Reference Library" on ftsc.org, I
see numerous FSC's listed. I would be obliged if someone could tell
me if these documents are standards, proposals or what, thanks.
They are proposals that for one reason or another did not make it into a standard.
So: rejected proposals.
Cheers, Michiel
Hello Michiel!
*** Wednesday 30.12.20 at 15:03, Michiel van der Vlist wrote to Martin Foste
Under the first heading of "Fidonet Reference Library" on ftsc.org, I
see numerous FSC's listed. I would be obliged if someone could tell
me if these documents are standards, proposals or what, thanks.
MvdV> They are proposals that for one reason or another did not make it int
MvdV> a standard.
MvdV> So: rejected proposals.
Thank you very much for clarifying that.
I have questions :)
[1]Is there any record anywhere of the reason(s) why these proposals
were rejected?
[2]Is a software developer permitted to implement any of these
rejected proposals in his/her software?
[3]Am I correct in assuming that the FSP's are proposals awaiting
either acceptance or rejection by the FTSC?
Regards,
Martin
I have questions :)
[1]Is there any record anywhere of the reason(s) why these proposals
were rejected?
[2]Is a software developer permitted to implement any of these
rejected proposals in his/her software?
[3]Am I correct in assuming that the FSP's are proposals awaiting
either acceptance or rejection by the FTSC?
[1]Is there any record anywhere of the reason(s) why these proposals
were rejected?
[2]Is a software developer permitted to implement any of these
rejected proposals in his/her software?
[3]Am I correct in assuming that the FSP's are proposals awaiting
either acceptance or rejection by the FTSC?
3 is correct. Many of them are NEVER picked up so never become a standard.
2 is also correct. Any developer can chose to run with them
but they may find if not compatible with others (and is something that
has to be), then it doesn't work.
1 is a 'no'. There is no tracking on just why something someone
proposed, never made standard.
The FTSC doesn't 'reject proposals'. They vote on existing ones that are in use by enough to be a standard.
Do we have a list of FSCs that are relevant?
1 is a 'no'. There is no tracking on just why something someone
proposed, never made standard.
The FTSC doesn't 'reject proposals'. They vote on existing ones that are in use by enough to be a standard.
Hello Carol!
** On Friday 01.01.21 - 12:16, Carol Shenkenberger wrote to Martin
Foster:
1 is a 'no'. There is no tracking on just why something someone
proposed, never made standard.
Usually, the why (with examples of usage) is present in the
preamble of the proposal. No?
Hello Carol!
*** Friday 01.01.21 at 12:16, Carol Shenkenberger wrote to Martin Foster:
[snip]
[1]Is there any record anywhere of the reason(s) why these proposals
were rejected?
[2]Is a software developer permitted to implement any of these
rejected proposals in his/her software?
[3]Am I correct in assuming that the FSP's are proposals awaiting
either acceptance or rejection by the FTSC?
3 is correct. Many of them are NEVER picked up so never become a standard.
OK, fine.
2 is also correct. Any developer can chose to run with them
but they may find if not compatible with others (and is something that has to be), then it doesn't work.
OK, fine.
I have another question :)
If a developer chooses to implement one of the FSC's, is it then at
the discretion of other software developers to provide support(or not)
for the implementation in their own software?
1 is a 'no'. There is no tracking on just why something someone proposed, never made standard.
OK, fine.
The FTSC doesn't 'reject proposals'. They vote on existing ones that a in use by enough to be a standard.
Ah, by "enough", do you mean in widespread use or what?
Regards,
Martin
Hello Carol!
** On Friday 01.01.21 - 12:16, Carol Shenkenberger wrote to Martin Foster:
1 is a 'no'. There is no tracking on just why something someone proposed, never made standard.
Usually, the why (with examples of usage) is present in the
preamble of the proposal. No?
The FTSC doesn't 'reject proposals'. They vote on existing ones that a in use by enough to be a standard.
Ah.. so, should the day arrive when only a minimum of 2 systems
exist, then as long as they agree to implement any proposal, that
becomes the new standard? :D
--
../|ug
'In use enough' means a lot more than 2 systems.
You and Stas have something unique. There is no reason to not make a proposal on how it operates.
..In ASIAN_LINK there is a discussion you are in
relating to cell phones and SD cards. An example of a 3rd party utility following relevant portions of a 'standard' to inter-operate with TELEGRAM, would be a case of that if it allowed for use of SIM card storage (or pluggin mini-pin external HD?) to store a bigger backlog of messages than their own device could handle.
All I really know about TELEGRAM is it works and I have all the same moderator controls as expected. Including to remove a user if they prove problematic (which none have been). To me, it's a unique OLR type setup. Not really different from using Bluewave etc. on the end seen from others. Nice job!
Carol wrote (2021-01-06):
All I really know about TELEGRAM is it works and I have all the same
moderator controls as expected. Including to remove a user if they
prove problematic (which none have been). To me, it's a unique OLR
type setup. Not really different from using Bluewave etc. on the end
seen from others.
'In use enough' means a lot more than 2 systems.
Yeah. But "what if" there were at most 3 systems/mailers (and the rest user in the world - one for each main zone? ;)
Technically, they could implement all the proposals and that would be their standard - and as long those things don't break some of the older systems should a 4th want to come onboard, then who is to say they are not following standards? ;)
You and Stas have something unique. There is no reason to not make a proposal on how it operates.
That would probably take place far from now. But currently it is just a toss project that complies to existing FTN standards. The Telegram "app" is not modified. But maybe in the future someone could build a version that featur things like taglines, quoting options, etc..
..In ASIAN_LINK there is a discussion you are in
relating to cell phones and SD cards. An example of a 3rd party utility following relevant portions of a 'standard' to inter-operate with TELEGRA would be a case of that if it allowed for use of SIM card storage (or pluggin mini-pin external HD?) to store a bigger backlog of messages than their own device could handle.
Correct. Better "offline" capability would be interesting. That could break that advantage of portability though. But right now, the build-in S)earch o the current app is pretty good - as long as one is still connected online.
All I really know about TELEGRAM is it works and I have all the same moderator controls as expected. Including to remove a user if they prove problematic (which none have been). To me, it's a unique OLR type setup. Not really different from using Bluewave etc. on the end seen from others Nice job!
Thank for saying that. I am not sure if the developer follows this echo, bu I'll forward your sentiments.
Oli wrote (2021-01-07):
Carol wrote (2021-01-06):
All I really know about TELEGRAM is it works and I have all the same
moderator controls as expected. Including to remove a user if they
prove problematic (which none have been). To me, it's a unique OLR
type setup. Not really different from using Bluewave etc. on the end
seen from others.
and it's also completely different from an offline reader, which doesn't involve big commercial third party messaging services with a privacy policy that the user hasn't agreed to.
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