> -----Original Message-----
> From: Stefano Mazzocchi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: woensdag 28 november 2001 12:43
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: sharing microsoft experience
>

> The editor I'd like to have is an editor composed for the specific user,
> on the specific schema, on the specific context. It's a server-side
> generated editor. And this is why I love the contentEditing capabilities
> of IE 5.5 because they are granular to the single element and allow me
> to restrict the content editing commands that the writer has.
>
> Of course, I'd also love to be able to add more abstract semantic
> capabilities to those editing commands (instead of hardcoding even good
> sematnic HTML into it) and I think Mozilla will be the key for this.

Yet another commercial inspiration source: http://www.xmlspy.com/products_doc.html

[...]
Browser Plug-in
The XML Spy 4.0 Document Editor is currently available as a stand-alone application,
integrated into the XML Spy 4.0 IDE as an additional view, or as a Browser Plug-In
for Internet Explorer. The browser plug-in is the only browser-based solution
currently offered in the industry, and it is based upon open standards, such as XML
Schema and XSLT.
[...]

Mozilla is cool etc... but if we want to build something that can stand up against
what is already out there, and considering the still cumbersome browser-share that
Netscape AND Mozilla have, going for a Mozilla-centric approach seems kind of
dangerous to me.

Steven Noels
http://outerthought.org/
(+32)478 292900


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