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Content Tagged with Markup + webstandards

XHTML - myths and realities

Clears up a lot of misconceptions and offers practical real life solutions.

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RDFa - Implications for Accessibility- Standards Schmandards

"Here are my initial thoughts on how I believe RDFa will benefit web accessibility. If you are new to RDFa I recommend reading the Wikipedia entry on RDFa and the W3C RDFa primer as an introduction."

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X/HTML 5 Versus XHTML 2

Despite the author's insistence on describing everything as 'cool' or 'uncool', this is an excellently comprehensive article on the markup languages competing to become the main model of web design.

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Standards Schmandards - A pragmatic approach to web standards and accessibility

Nice little site reflecting on pragmatic issues surrounding approaches to standards and accessibility. See. esp. the Government section.

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XHTML 2 and all that ~ Jeffrey Zeldman Presents: The Daily Report

"Five months ago, I underwent a crisis of faith after reading a draft XHTML 2 specification that was deliberately incompatible with XHTML 1 and HTML 4. For weeks I was unable to work on my book, Forward Compatibility. The title seemed a lie."

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Semantic obsolescence [dive into mark]

"Standards are bullshit. XHTML is a crock. The W3C is irrelevant."

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HTML5 timeline - Anne's Weblog

It is that in fifteen years we expect HTML5 to be a fully integrated part of the Web with rock solid implementations you can rely on.

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A List Apart: Articles: A Preview of HTML 5

Work on HTML 5 is rapidly progressing, yet it is still expected to continue for several years. Due to the requirement to produce test cases and achieve interoperable implementations, current estimates have work finishing in around ten to fifteen years.

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A List Apart: Articles: A Preview of HTML 5

The div elements can be replaced with the new elements: header, nav, section, article, aside, and footer.

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X/HTML 5 Versus XHTML 2

"The competition to become the next markup language for the Web is heating up. This article takes a look at what's cool and what's uncool about the competing technologies."

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h3h.net - Sending XHTML as text/html Considered Harmful to Feelings

"Ian Hickson wrote a piece awhile ago called Sending XHTML as text/html Considered Harmful. He introduces several main points against sending XHTML documents with a text/html MIME type, which, I believe, are wholly unconvincing."

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Quick guide to XHTML - Anne’s Weblog

"There is so much to tell about XHTML and HTML and how to do it the correct way that I'm not sure where to start. I'm an advocate of using XHTML only in the correct way, which basically means you have to use HTML. Period."

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Surfin’ Safari - Blog Archive » Understanding HTML, XML and XHTML

"The relationships among HTML, XML and XHTML are an area of considerable confusion on the web. We often see questions on the webkit-dev mailing list where people wonder why their seemingly XHTML documents result in HTML output."

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Surfin’ Safari - Blog Archive » Understanding HTML, XML and XHTML

"The relationships among HTML, XML and XHTML are an area of considerable confusion on the web. We often see questions on the webkit-dev mailing list where people wonder why their seemingly XHTML documents result in HTML output."

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Andy Budd::Blogography: Whither W3C?

This invisibility is partly due to their widespread adoption. However it is also down to their slow rate of change

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SitePoint Blogs » Six Months Later: The New HTML Working Group

What is being discussed In a bid to standardize a small number of common class names so that they may be used by browsers and assistive technologies to infer greater meaning from HTML documents, the WHAT Working Group proposed the following predefined

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