[whatwg] Turkish encodings: ISO 8859-9 CP1254

2008-04-03 Thread Øistein E . Andersen
As suggested earlier, ISO 8859-9 is a proper subset of CP1254, and IE7 always uses the superset. [Actually, the name shown in the menu varies -- Turkish (ISO) v. Turkish (Windows) --, but the underlying encoding vector appears to be the same.] Test pages (identical data, different Charset

Re: [whatwg] Video

2008-04-03 Thread Anne van Kesteren
On Thu, 03 Apr 2008 19:21:42 +0200, Charles [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: With all due respect: the mission of the WWW Corporation is to create standards, not to create situations. Not to speak for Robert, but I'm guessing that his point is that the W3C isn't creating a standard here. Note that

Re: [whatwg] Video

2008-04-03 Thread Charles
The current standard for publishing media on the Web, in particular consumer media, is Adobe Flash. This isn't specifically directed at Silvia, but let's all be careful not to conflate a particular runtime with any actual or de facto standards that the runtime supports. The first YouTube media

Re: [whatwg] Video

2008-04-03 Thread Charles
With all due respect: the mission of the WWW Corporation is to create standards, not to create situations. Not to speak for Robert, but I'm guessing that his point is that the W3C isn't creating a standard here. Note that this isn't a W3C list, but a WHATWG list. They are distinct

Re: [whatwg] Video

2008-04-03 Thread Anne van Kesteren
On Thu, 03 Apr 2008 20:07:50 +0200, Charles [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: With all due respect: the mission of the WWW Corporation is to create standards, not to create situations. Not to speak for Robert, but I'm guessing that his point is that the W3C isn't creating a standard here. Note that