Yeah but, SVG is XML, and XML can't be ignored on the web. Yes, they 
could try to ignore the SVG implementation, but SVG is more or less 
native to the browser.

In 2 years, SVG will have nearly every advantage over JPG, PDF, and in 
many cases will be preferred over HTML. Why? Because when the noise is 
reduced in an image through color segmentation and shape grouping, the 
SVG looks better and is smaller than JPG. It has multiple pages like PDF 
without as large a security hole. In SVG, all artifacts can be read by a 
search engine, but only text that can be imaged (which isn't good 
enough) can be searched in PDF. The browser can do many more things with 
SVG (e.g., animate photographs or time sounds) than it can with HTML 
because SVG presents the data to the browser in computer code rather 
than random dots.


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