We're going a little off-topic here. ;-) My point is not about tags, but about how a CSS reset should be used. Eric's reset is a general-purpose tool that should be always tailored to your specific needs and not copied and pasted without knowing exactly what it does (as many authors do). Since CSS is not a programming language, authors can modify the original file by adding or removing specific rules with ease. Eric's reset is not like jQuery or Prototype: its core can be modified to address specific projects. For example, if you use XHTML and not HTML5 you can remove the reference to HTML5 tags. And so on. :-)
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