> (1) opening an issue in the wrong forum and (2) failing to familiarize yourself with the previous discussion threads
OK. Fair enough, but I did look for an existing issue on the matter. There were none.
> You know this is a controversial topic, please act more maturely in the future.
Personally, I find attempting to lock down open internet-protocols by transforming them into some sort of binary obscurity rude and against everything the internet was built on.
I don't think everyone is aware about that happening right now. and I see nothing wrong with attempting to bring focus to the issue if that is what needed. Seeing how this draft still outlines a binary-protocol, this clearly still is in need of attention.
Just because some Google-heads somewhere decided that by completely ignoring everything the internet has taught us so far, and in the name of pre-mature optimization can shave off 2ms on their page-load doesn't mean the internet should pander to their interests.
If anything is controversial it is how this is all being done without any documentation showing us what benefits we get from the costs associated with a binary protocol. That is amazing. Completely and utterly amazing.
But OK. Let's say I listen to your guidance: Where would be a good place to raise this issue? Where would I take my "childish" issues to ensure they get the attention they so much deserve?
As they said, it belongs in the mailinglist. I too find it quite horrible that they demand technical arguments for why something should _not_ change. Usually one needs technical arguments to justify a change.
OK. Fair enough, but I did look for an existing issue on the matter. There were none.
> You know this is a controversial topic, please act more maturely in the future.
Personally, I find attempting to lock down open internet-protocols by transforming them into some sort of binary obscurity rude and against everything the internet was built on.
I don't think everyone is aware about that happening right now. and I see nothing wrong with attempting to bring focus to the issue if that is what needed. Seeing how this draft still outlines a binary-protocol, this clearly still is in need of attention.
Just because some Google-heads somewhere decided that by completely ignoring everything the internet has taught us so far, and in the name of pre-mature optimization can shave off 2ms on their page-load doesn't mean the internet should pander to their interests.
If anything is controversial it is how this is all being done without any documentation showing us what benefits we get from the costs associated with a binary protocol. That is amazing. Completely and utterly amazing.
But OK. Let's say I listen to your guidance: Where would be a good place to raise this issue? Where would I take my "childish" issues to ensure they get the attention they so much deserve?