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Each product needs its enhancements, but we have all seen how the Netscape and IE battle made the web a scary place for users. It seems currently that the browser manufacturers do have a commitment to standards, but will this last? We are basically talking about programs that are free. The average surfer is not really driving the market, or are they?
We have seen HTML stand the test of time. It is moving to XHTML, but it is basically the same thing. We have seen bolt-on technologies like JavaScript and CSS. Is this the future creating more bolt on stuff or are we going to see it move to an all-inclusive standard?
So where are we going? What is your future? Are we leaving a browser based web?
2000 posts yaaaa
It is this second point that I feel is vital. As you pointed out Korkus, most expansion has been achieved through plug-in/bolt-on technologies such as Flash, JavaScript, etc. These "kludgey" approaches make life hell for web developers when it comes to browser compatibility.
So, to combat our browser compatibility woes, what do we do?...revert back to plain HTML so we can be viewed my the largest audience possible.
No other sector of technology adheres to these rules. When have you ever hear Microsoft say, "Hey, we can't release this software. It doesn't work in Win 95 which is still used by 2% of the public."? However, web developers have to bend over backwards for the 2% that is still using NN4.
It is necessary that we seperate data from style and XHTML is only a half-solution. Granted, XML is a few years ahead of itself but the ability to save data in a hierarchical format ready to deliver to a web browser or web application, to be formatted for those with 20/20 eyesight or the visually impaired (even the blind), to pull and exchange raw data as needed with data repositories on any server platform is where the web is headed - and where it should be headed.