mikhael, i don't realy understand your passion for "breaking the rules",
but unlike what you think, there is still use of visual hebrew, and
a lot of software still uses visual hebrew. your personal dislike of it
should not be the basis for breaking things up.

if you want to apply a switch, you should remember that in a world of
standards, there is a deprecation period for a feature, before it is being
declared obsolete.

if people will just go with your method, we'll have messy transition
periods. in fact, the world of hebrew web sites was quite messy before
the introduction of iso-8859-8-i - and just when all browsers started
interpreting things in the manner dror described - hebrew in web sites
begun working for the users.

now, please, keep down the harsh tone, and stop looking at this as a
"black-and-white" issue - there are different grades of grey to it...

-- 
guy

"For world domination - press 1,
 or dial 0, and please hold, for the creator." -- nob o. dy

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