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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3O//DTD WWW HTML 2.0//EN">
<head>
<title>WWW '94 Trip Report by Dan Connolly</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>WWW '94 Trip Report</h1>
<address>
<a href="http://www.hal.com/~connolly/index.html">Daniel W. Connolly</a><br>
connolly@hal.com<br>
trip-report.html,v 1.5 1994/06/03 17:25:29 connolly Exp<br>
$Id: trip-report.html,v 1.2 2006/10/11 05:49:42 connolly Exp $<br>
</address>
<h2 id="bg">Background</h2>
<p> <em>The First International World-Wide Web Conference</em> was
held in Geneva, Switzerland, May 25-28, 1994. For more background
information, see <A HREF="http://www1.cern.ch/WWW94/Welcome.html">
the WWW '94 web page at CERN</a>.
<h2 id="tue">Tuesday</h2>
<p> <a href="tuesday.html">Arrival, meeting with folks at CERN</a>
<hr>
<h2 id="wed">Wednesday Morning</h2>
<hr>
<H3 id="chaum"><em>Keynote Address</em> David Chaum, DigiCash</h3>
<p> The keynote address was given by David Chaum from DigiCash. It was
an incredible eye-opener. I'll summarize his talk with an excerpt
from an article he wrote:
<blockquote>
<p> The growing amounts of information that different organizations
collect about a person can be linked because all of them use the
same key--tin the U.S. the social security number--to identify the
individual in question. This identifier-based approach perforce
trades off security against individual liberties. The more
information that organizations have (whether the intent is to
protect them from fraud or simply to target marketing efforts),
the less privacy and control people retain.
<p> Over the past eight years, my colleages and I at CWI (the Dutch
nationally funded Center for Methematics and Computer Science in
Amsterdam) have developed a new approach, based on fundamental
theoretical and practical advances in cryptography, that makes
this trade-off unnecessary. Transactions employing these
techniques avoid the possiblity of fraud while maintaining the
privacy of those who use them.
<address>David Chaum<br>
<cite>Achieving Electronic Privacy</cite><br>
Scientific American, August 1992, pp. 96-101
</address>
</blockquote>
<p> His remarks colored many discussions throughout the conference. In
the closing plenary panel, it was largely agreed that the Web
needs a sort of "Bill of Rights" to protect the rights of citizens
in the developing digital age.
<hr>
<h3 id="hardin"><em>The State of the Web</em> Joseph Hardin, NCSA</h3>
<p> Mr. Harding had quite an impressive collection of graphs of
statistical evidence to support the conclusion: <strong>The Web is
big, and it's growing exponentially.</strong> Any data that were
inconsistent with exponential growth could be attributed to
phenomena such as server crashes, national holidays, etc.
<p> With regard to Mosaic, he mentioned some collaboration between
NCSA, Adobe, and other parties on an API for interactions between
"applets" on the client side (i.e. desktop).
<p> It was an interesting talk, and I don't have time to do it justice
here, but I will include a list of issues from his slides:
<dl>
<dt>Global
<dd><ul>
<li>Indexing
<li>Searching
<li>Knowledge Daemonry
</ul>
<dt>Personal
<dd><ul>
<li>Publishing
<li>Agentry
</ul>
</dl>
<hr>
<h3 id="tbl"><em>The Future of the Web</em> Tim Berners-Lee, CERN</h3>
<h4 id="semweb">The Web as a Knowledge Base</h4>
<p> Currently, links between nodes on the web are constructed by the
author for the use of the reader, but they convey little
information to the machine that would allow it to do automated
indexing or searching, or to make inferences.
<p> There has long been a notion of "typed links" in the web software
architecture, but it has not been deployed in
practice. Relatively modest applications of this concept include
links that associate a stylesheet with a document, or links that
aggregate several nodes in a collection for the purpose or
printing the aggregate document.
<h4 id="collab">Collaboration</h4>
<p> The success of Mosaic has brought the capability to "surf" the web
to a huge user community. But to this community, the web is
largely read-only.
<p> Immediately, we can see that tools for distributed maintenance of
the web would make life easier for information providers. But more
importantly, the deployment of technology like Mosaic creates
class distinctions in the web community: the community as a whole
has grown tremendously, but the information providers remain a
privileged minority, and if we are not careful, the views of that
minority may misrepresent the actual views of the community that
they represent.
<p> Contrast this with USENET, where every newsreader has a "post"
feature, which can creates an article with the same readership as
the original article. This fosters free, open, democratic debate.
<p> The Web was conceived as such a democratic forum, and it is only
due to lack of resources that collaborative tools have not been
deployed.
<h4 id="vr">The Web and Virtual Reality</h4>
<p> Tim Berners-Lee sees the future of the web as one in which the
objects in the web represent objects in the real world such that a
house-object might have an "owner" link to a person-object, such
that changing that link to point to a different person-object has
the effect of transferring legal ownership of the house between
those persons. Obviously there are a range of security issues. But
commerce on the web is coming, and other applications of virtual
reality will follow.
<h4 id="w3-org">W3O</h4>
<p> The funding is not completely in place, and so to make a big
announcement about W3O would be to steal the thunder of the
upcoming announcement by the funding agencies. So W3O has not been
formally announced.
<p> But there were enough questions about what organization would
carry the torch for WWW that Tim got permission from the powers
that be to make some information available.
<p> W3O will be an international consortium with two principal sites:
one at MIT to oversee U.S. operations, and one at CERN to oversee
European operations. The intent is that it will operate like the X
Consortium: companies will pay a fee to be members, and in return,
they'll get early access to the technology. The technical team at
W3O will act as editors of the specifications, and will develop
reference implementations. Contribution, discussion, and
collaboration will be invited and encouraged.
<hr>
<h2 id="wed">Wednesday Afternoon</h2>
<hr>
<h3 id="wwwig">WWWIG Meeting (Take One)</h3>
<p> This meeting was arranged rather haphazardly, and there were some
important players missing. We met again on Thursday, but to
summarize...
<p> I presented some <a href="wwwig-slides.html">slides</a> that a
couple OLIAS project managers and I put together.
<p> I explained that I began working on the HTML specification when I
was in the documentation tools group at <a
href="http://www.convex.com/">Convex Computer Corp.</a> I was out
of the loop for a year, but now I am on the <a
href="http://www.hal.com/products/sw/olias/index.html">OLIAS
project at HaL Software Systems</a>, where once again, I am
grappling with the issues of delivering high quality products that
interoperate with WWW, which is a moving target.
<p> Recently, I began soliciting support for vendor-supported
specifications for WWW technologies. Since it appears that W3O
will handle these issues in the long term, I have narrowed my
focus to achieving interoperability among products supporting HTML
in the upcoming months.
<p> We discussed some of <a href="html-issues.html">the outstanding issues</a>.
<p> The vendors showing support at this meeting include:
<dl>
<dt> HaL Software Systems
<dd> A future release of <a
href="http://www.hal.com/products/sw/olias/index.html">OLIAS</a>,
an SGML document browser by HaL Software Systems, will support
browsing HTML documents from web servers. We also develop SGML
document development tools, including a FrameMaker gateway. We
may add HTML support to these tools in a future release.
<dt> <a href="http://www.spyglass.com/">Spyglass</a>
<dd> Erik W. Sink <code><esink@spyglass.com></code> was very
open in representing his company's support for WWW: the HTML
specifcation effort, WWWLibrary development, etc.
<dt> <a href="http://www.sco.com/">SCO</a> and <a
href="http://www.sco.com/IXI"> IXI</a>
<dd> Murray Malone <code><murray@sco.com></code> from the
technical publications department of SCO represented his
company's interest in this effort.
<dt> <a href="http://www.sun.com/smli/index.html">Sun Microsystems
Laboratories, Inc.</a>
<dd> I have a card from Gary R. Adams
<code><gary.adams@east.sun.com></code>. In all the rush, I
seem to have forgotten the details of our discussions.
</dl>
<hr>
<h3 id="sgml">Workshop: <em>The Role of SGML in WWW</em></h3>
<p> See also: <a href="http://tyr.let.rug.nl/~bert/SGML.html">the call
for participation</a>, <a
href="http://www.let.rug.nl/SGML-verslag.html">a summary by Bert
Bos</a>.
<p> Bert Bos moderated this discussion about how SGML plays in WWW.
The attendees were mostly bigtime SGML publishers that were
interested in delivering their wares online. Intellectual property
rights and mechanisms and HTML+ features were the hot topics,
along with stylesheets, Adobe PDF, and legacy documents.
<hr>
<h3 id="hackers">WWW Hacker's Dinner</h3>
<p> Tim Berners-Lee organized a sort of pizza-dinner and brainstorming
session for Wednesday evening, but it turned out to be a casual
chat out in the courtyard over a few beers.
<p> Rather than hashing over technical ideas, mostly we got to know
each other a little better. To (mis)use a new term from this
conference, we did some "social engineering."
<hr>
<h2 id="thu-am">Thursday Morning</h2>
<hr>
<h3 id="devrc"><a
href="http://cui_www.unige.ch/WWW94/Workshops/workshop.list.html#wwwDev">
Development Priorities </a> Robert Cailliau</h3>
<p> The object of the game was to get a list of needed future
developments, and prioritize them. We managed to come up with a
list, but it seemed pointless to order them. Tim Berners-Lee put
the list online in in <a
href="http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/WorkingNotes/WWW94/DevPriBOF.html">
his notes</a>.
<hr>
<h2 id="thu-pm">Thursday Afternoon</h2>
<hr>
<h3 id="wwwig2">WWWIG Meeting (Take Two)</h3>
<p> This time, the vendors represented were:
<dl>
<dt> NCSA
<dd> Joseph Hardin
<dt> SoftQuad
<dd> Yuri Rubinski
<dt> OCLC
<dd> Stu Wiebel
<dt> HaL
<dd> Joseph Schneider
<dt> Spyglass
<dd> Eric Sink
<dt> CERN
<dd> Tim Berners-Lee
</dl>
<p> We started out talking about the HTML spec document that I have
been working on, but twice we wandered off and started talking
about the WWWLibrary code.
<p> Mr. Harding suggested setting up a task force to coordinate
development of the code -- distributing diffs, avoiding duplicated
work, etc. Eric Sink, myself, Ari Luotonen, Henrik Frystyk, and
some folks from NCSA were nominated. I'm not sure what's next for
that group.
<p> There was some discussion about long-term maintenance issues. Tim
explained the status of W3O, and where he thinks it's headed.
<p> Yuri Rubinski suggested that the HTML spec could be published as
an SGML Open technical report. This looks like a good idea. We
form a technical committee, review the document, and publish it.
The committee retains editorial and intellectual property control
over the document.
<p> The document will be available for review on the web through
CERN's server. I gave a pointer to the copy on the HaL server, but
that's only temporary. We'll probably spin an IETF draft or two in
the mean-time too.
<hr>
<h3 id="boat">Dinner On the Boat</h3>
<hr>
<h2 id="fri-am">Friday Morning</h2>
<hr>
<h3 id="html-plus">HTML+ Workshop Dave Ragget</h3>
<p> This was a long one, with lots of spicy discussion.
<p> One interesting development is that right now, HTML is compatible
with disabled-access publishing techniques; i.e. blind people can
read HTML documents. We must be careful that we don't lose this
feature by adding too many visual presentation features to HTML.
<p> More discussion topics that I don't have time to expand on...
<ul>
<li> Balance simplicity with features in HTML/HTML+
<li> Compound document architecture
<li> Math -- typography and semantics
<li> <a href="htmlplus-maloney.html">HTML interoperability issue chart</a>
</ul>
<hr>
<h2 id="fri-pm">Friday Afternoon</h2>
<hr>
<h3 id="panel">Plenary Panel</h3>
<p> See also: <a
href="http://www1.cern.ch/WWW94/Images/ClosingPanel/list.html"> CERN's
collection of photos of the panel</a>
<p> Each of the panelists was asked to briefly discuss the most
important future developments on the Web.
<ul>
<li>"Rick" Channing
Rodgers, National Library of Medecine
<li> Dave Raggett, HP Labs
<li> Kevin Altis, Intel
<li> Dan Connolly, HaL Software
<li> Tim Berners-Lee, CERN
<li> Robert Cailliau, CERN
<li> Dr. Joseph Hardin, NCSA
<li> Dr. Yuri Rubinsky of SoftQuad
<li> Dr. Bipin Desai
<li> Børre Ludvigsen, the man with the home on the Web
</ul>
<p> The same issues came up in several of the speaker's discussions:
<ul>
<li> Resource discovery: how will users navigate this vast body of
information? What systems will we deploy to make it manageable?
<li> Automated Agents: active objects will represent users in
everything from conducting complex queries to negociating the
purchase of information objects and even physical objects.
<li> "Bill of Rights" for the information age: what ground-rules must
we establish to prevent "data facism" and absolute control of
this new medium by powerful commercial entities?
<li> Collaboration: right now the web is read-only for the vast
majority of the user community. In order to build a democratic
digital society, everyone must be able to make their views known.
<li> Commercialization of the net: it's inevitable. What can we do to
ensure that it is a win-win situation?
</ul>