On 17/06/2005, at 10:01 PM, Lea de Groot wrote:
August will see us avidly listening to John Bates talking to us about
Internationalisation (geez, no wonder it is routinely abbreviated to
'i18n'!).
I've been told it's shortened for two reasons:
Firstly, it's much easier to type.
Secondly, it
18n guru Richard is listening and will
tell everyone if I'm wrong.
PPS. This is a good test to see if the WSG mail system can
handle UTF-8 (assuming Apple Mail encodes the message using it).
Dean
--
dean jackson
world wide web consortium (w3c) - http://www.w3.org/
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
***
On 12 Apr 2005, at 09:33, Kornel Lesinski wrote:
On Tue, 12 Apr 2005 00:02:52 +0100, Dmitry Baranovskiy
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have developed some projects on SVG
(http://siter.com.au/dmitry/Pie/pie.html ,
http://siter.com.au/dmitry/Composer/Composer.html ,
http://siter.com.au/dmitry/MaxCon
he problem is that access tools haven't quite
harnessed the power yet (which is understandable since it's tough
to make money in that area so they concentrate on the most
popular format, HTML).
I'll end the advertisement here.
Dean
--
dean jackson
world wide web consortium (w3c) -
On 15 Mar 2005, at 18:10, Sigurd Magnusson wrote:
I keep seeing asterisks in the W3C spec but cannot see a glossary
anywhere. As an example, with the img element in xhtml 1.1, the
attributes 'src' and 'alt' are both marked with an asterisk. Why?
http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml-modularization/
abst
On 23 Feb 2005, at 09:49, John Allsopp wrote:
John,
What I want is the ability to align the content of a DIV, for
instance, or any block element, vertically, and I'm asking why it
wasn't included in CSS-1.
I can't think of any policy-type reason why it wasn't, that's all,
and I don't see vertic
On 22 Feb 2005, at 21:07, Patrick Lauke wrote:
Dean Jackson
[snip]
I don't think it's beyond the scope of the W3C. We're
constantly looking
at technologies like XUL. Do people see the need for standardisation
in this area?
I'd welcome some standardisation, but as John Allsop
John,
On 22 Feb 2005, at 15:42, John Allsopp wrote:
I don't think it's beyond the scope of the W3C. We're constantly
looking
at technologies like XUL. Do people see the need for standardisation
in this area?
Sure.
I think the real benefit of standardisation and standards bodies is
not necessarily
's, of course, not a W3C standard), so I think I'll leave
it at that now...
I don't think it's beyond the scope of the W3C. We're constantly looking
at technologies like XUL. Do people see the need for standardisation
in this area?
Dean
--
dean jackson
world wide
I realise that many people have already responded.
Sorry for the echo. I'm not in the CSS working group, but
I do work for W3C.
On 17 Feb 2005, at 10:31, David R wrote:
Just out of curiosity...
Is the CSS3.0 Spec finalised, or are they still accepting suggestions
and comments?
I'm not sure there w
On 18 Oct 2004, at 21:10, Mark Harwood wrote:
Not commercialy, but personaly on your own blog sites are other little
community
sites?
I've just redesigned my blog (www.phunky.co.uk) and in doing so i
decided i was
not going
to touch some of the minor issuse that IE has with my site, although
it
On 18 Oct 2004, at 13:37, Ryan Christie wrote:
You're free to make your own W3C badges to place on your site. Most
people I see, incl. myself, just use text links in the footer. W3C
won't hunt you down for infringement or anything.
There are definitely some copyright issues in using the logo with
On 18 Oct 2004, at 12:50, Rick Faaberg wrote:
Hi all,
Who can I send a suggestion to at W3C that they make their web badges
a lot
more subtle (and smaller) so that I would actually use them on my
sites?
I work for the W3C and I've heard your suggestion.
While I'm not the badges guy, I know they h
On 7 Oct 2004, at 02:09, Vlad Alexander (XStandard) wrote:
Hi Kim,
Ian Hickson is _not_ saying XHTML is harmful, he is saying that
serving up XHTML with the wrong MIME type is bad.
That's right. It's probably not the best title for the
document, but my feeling is that people using the "... conside
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