> Humans don't work that way. If the words "HTML (WARNING)" or > "XHTML (WARNING)" started appearing next to over 90 percent > of search results, people would not think that something was > wrong with 90 percent of Web pages. They would think that > something was wrong with the search engine. And they would be right.
Then it could say "(X)HTML Validated!" or "(X)HTML NOT-Validated." The point is to create a reason why web site owners will ever care. People will do a cost-benefit analysis of ensuring their (X)HTML validates and, without a downside they clearly see, too many will choose not to. -- -Mike Schinkel http://www.mikeschinkel.com/blogs/ http://www.welldesignedurls.org/
