Quoting White Lynx <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
"Web application technologies SHOULD BE BASED ON technologies authors are familiar with,
including HTML, CSS, DOM, AND JAVASCRIPT"

As it would work with that, it's not really a problem.


"Basic Web application features SHOULD BE IMPLEMENTABLE using behaviors,
scripting, and style sheets IN IE6 TODAY"

I guess that's possible.


"Any solution that CANNOT BE USED with the current high-market-share user
agent WITHOUT THE NEED FOR BINARY PLUG-INS is highly unlikely to be successful"

...


"The core features of an XML vocabulary should require the use of elements
from ONLY ONE NAMESPACE."

Is math really a core feature? Does it matter if we keep compatibility with existing (deployed) formats in mind?


"IT IS VERY IMPORTANT that authors BE ABLE TO MOVE FROM AN HTML ENVIRONMENT
TO A CLEAN COMPOUND DOCUMENT ENVIRONMENT (typically first simply by moving to XHTML) IN A GRADUAL FASHION."

That seems to be what Ian is proposing (for math), more or less.


--
Anne van Kesteren
<http://annevankesteren.nl/>

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