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From YouTube: OpenJS Foundation Standards Team 2020/07/14
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A
A
B
Great
announcements
very
timely
and
we
also
have
a
couple
of
other
foundation
meetings
that
are
happening
and
this
week
in
early
next,
so
Joe
has
open
office
hours
on
Thursday
at
1
o'clock
Eastern.
So
that's
the
four
o'clock
UTC
I
think
and
then
we
also
have
the
marketing
meeting
next
Tuesday.
So
for
folks
who
may
be
interested
in
participating
in
open,
jeaious
foundation,
marketing
and
that's
that's
coming
up
next
week
related
to
our
standards.
B
B
C
If
you
have
questions
or
comments,
some
of
them
to
me
I
think
a
pub
is
interesting.
It's
an
interesting
thing
that
was
not
developed
in
the
w3c.
It
was
developed
in
the
IDPF
which
later
merged
with
w3c,
and
it
is
a
complex
set
of
technologies
that
is
like
sort
of
above
the
web.
It
used
a
lot
of
web
technologies
and
it's
part
of
like
a
multi-billion
dollar
industry.
C
B
C
B
C
Thank
you.
So,
like
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
us,
we
wear
different
hats.
So,
in
addition
to
representing
open
jazz
foundation
in
w3c,
I
work
for
agalya
and
what
we
do
is
we
work
on
all
the
web,
browsers,
they're,
all
open
source
and
we
work
on
them.
We
implement
it
like
CSS
grid
in
WebKit.
In
chromium,
we
work
on
the
JavaScript
engines.
We
were
implemented
like
big
int
and
class
fields,
but
typically
the
investment
in
developing
web
standards,
not
creating
web
standards.
C
Tons
of
companies
participate
in
creating
web
standards,
but
all
those
words
that
they
create
create
new
work
that
somebody
has
to
do
and
for
most
of
the
history
of
the
web.
That
was
locked
up
in
the
very
few
vendors
with
very
few
number
of
people
that
would
invest
in
that,
since
they
become
open-source,
that's
expanded
a
little
bit
and
what
a
Galia
does
is
sort
of
that
for
hire.
C
So
there
is
a
lot
in
the
queue
of
web
standards
that
is
ultimately
held
up
by
trying
to
get
priority
from
a
very
few
number
of
companies
and
that's
why
we're
able
to
do
what
we
do
and
we
thought
that
it
would
be
really
good
if
developers,
just
ordinary
developers
and
groups
of
developers
and
companies
could
somehow
find
a
way
to
discuss
and
pull
their
money
and
have
a
voice
in
how
we
like
advanced,
how
we
choose
what
to
prioritize.
Basically,
so
agalya's
launched
this
open
prioritization
experiment,
which
we
have
chosen.
C
Six
for
this
initial
run
six
very
carefully
chosen
things
that
we
tried
to
balance
in
different
browsers
at
different
stages:
different
sizes
of
projects,
although
they're
all
considerably
small
in
terms
of
scale
and
what
you
can
do
is
you
can
go
and
pledge
to
one
of
them
as
a
pledge:
collective,
open,
collective
and
the
first
one
that
reaches
it's
goal.
Agalya
promises
will
crowd,
combat
and
implement
it,
and
we
will
try
our
best
to
do
as
many
as
fun.
But
this
is
also
a
priority.
Problem
is
very
difficult
to
keep
time
for
a
thing.
C
You
don't
know
what
you
know
how
much
work
it
will
be,
so
we
have
to
stay
reasonable
there,
but
we
would
like
this
experiment
to
help
start
a
lot
of
really
interesting
and
healthy
discussions,
how
the
web
works
and
how
the
Commons
is
funded
and
whether
that's
healthy
and
how
we
can
all
do
better.
So
I
think
it's
potentially
really
empowering
and
really
exciting,
and
it
could
be
a
huge
shift
in
the
web,
but
we'll
see.
B
C
C
I
think
it's
really
I
think
it's
really
cool
experiment,
so
in
a
prior
incarnation
of
this,
as
part
of
it
could
have
been
as
part
of
the
open
or
as
part
of
the
Jas
Foundation
I
wrote
a
thing
back
in
2016
talking
about
how
we
need
new
ways
to
think
about
some
of
these
things.
So
I'm
really
really
really
pleased
to
see
something
come
together
and
really
great.
B
C
Yeah,
no,
we
have
actually
no
yeah.
Absolutely
we
have
items
like
I
say
it
was
difficult
to
come
up
with
a
short
list.
We
don't
want
a
very
very
long
list,
initially
is
very
difficult
to
come
up
with
a
very
short
list
that
balanced
where
the
work
is,
in
other
words
like
the
summer
CSS
summer
HTML,
as
well
as
a
diversity
of
browsers
and
a
diversity
of
sizes.
D
C
C
You
know,
part
of
the
idea,
like
I
said,
is
to
open
the
door
for
these
really
interesting
conversations
that
we
don't
tend
to
think
about,
because
we're
not
the
person
organizing
a
priority
for
the
various
locations,
but
it's
a
hard
choice
right
because
you
might
think,
for
example,
you
know
one
of
them
is
really
really
great,
but
it's
only
the
second
implementation,
so
it
doesn't
like
it
doesn't
get
you
the
thing
necessarily,
you
know
mate.
Well,
this
may
be
another.
One
is
the
last
imitation.
It
really
gets
you
the
thing.
C
C
B
D
B
C
B
B
So
this
was
our
only
topic
for
today
and
it's
a
fun
one.
So
that's
nice!
Is
there
any
other
business
that
the
group
would
like
to
bring
before
we
close
our
call
today,
nope,
okay,
one
thing
that
happened
between
now
and
last
time
we
we
met
was
and
our
blog
post
was
published.
Thank
You,
Rachel
room
office
off.