On 9 Oct 2011, at 21:19, Keith Bowes wrote: > Agreed. I don't actually think HTML5 itself is that common anyway. > There are some fanboys, but generally, the HTML5 revolution isn't going > to happen (no, the XHTML revolution didn't happen either, despite being > big in some communities, most notably the code generated by blogs, > forums, and similar tools). Almost all standards-compliant websites I see > are in XHTML > 1.0. I think the only place that HTML5 is going to make a dent is that > people are going to start using the new functionality in > non-standards-complaint pages (similar to how they did with HTML 4 and > XHTML).
I don't see how people using new features in tag soup documents instead of compliant documents makes a difference to the need for browsers to support those features. -- David Dorward http://dorward.me.uk _______________________________________________ Lynx-dev mailing list [email protected] https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lynx-dev
