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ASSASIN'S CREED 2 FOOTAGE!

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2 posters

    Web Standards: How to Untangle the Web We Weave

    avatar
    XxJamesxX
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    Number of posts : 14
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    Registration date : 2008-03-12

    Web Standards: How to Untangle the Web We Weave Empty Web Standards: How to Untangle the Web We Weave

    Post by XxJamesxX Mon Mar 17, 2008 5:44 am

    Web Standards: How to Untangle the Web We Weave




    Birmingham Post

    03/15/08 4:00 AM PT


    Microsoft said the new version of its browser,
    when complete, will support industry-standard versions of the code that
    tells browsers what Web pages should look like, including CSS 2.1, by
    default. "That's a big deal," said Chris Swenson, a software industry
    analyst for the NPD Group.




    has given testers their first glimpse of its next-generation Web
    browser -- and said Internet Explorer 8 will adhere to the same
    standards as competitors' programs.
    Microsoft's browsers,
    including the current Internet Explorer 7, gained notoriety among Web
    developers for handling Web page code differently than (Nasdaq: AAPL) Safari, the now-defunct Netscape Navigator and others.
    For the most part, major non-Microsoft browsers and outside
    developers who built Web pages worked with agreed-upon technical
    standards, while Microsoft was accused of adding proprietary code to
    those standards.
    The result: Web pages that looked good in Internet Explorer, but broke on other browsers, or vice versa.




    Broken Pages



    At a Web developer conference in Las Vegas, Dean Hachamovitch, general manager for Microsoft's Internet Explorer division, made light of Microsoft's past spotty standards and pledged to do better.
    Hachamovitch said that in early Internet Explorer 7 days, his kids
    would hear about broken Web sites and ask, "Daddy, did you guys break
    the Web?"
    "And most of the time I could honestly say, 'No.' But, you know, Web
    developers might answer that question a little bit differently,"
    Hachamovitch added.


    Not So Funny



    He elicited a laugh, but developers have sometimes had to build Web
    sites from scratch a second time to devise a version that worked with
    Microsoft's browsers.
    Microsoft said the new version of the browser, when complete, will
    support industry-standard versions of the code that tells browsers what
    Web pages should look like, including CSS (cascading style sheets) 2.1,
    by default.
    "That's a big deal," said Chris Swenson, a software industry analyst for the NPD Group.
    While most Web surfers might not feel a huge impact, Swenson said it
    will bring "a sigh of relief" for developers, who will spend a lot less
    time tweaking Web pages to work with different browsers.


    Standards Lacking



    However, both Swenson and Microsoft note that Web standards continue
    to evolve, and that definitive tests to determine compliance don't yet
    exist.
    Microsoft indicated its intention to step up involvement with this process.
    The group's decision might also help it fend off a new antitrust investigation in Europe.
    Regulators are looking into whether the software maker held other browsers back by not following open Internet standards.
    The probe was launched after Norwegian browser developer Opera Software filed a complaint in late 2007.
    Microsoft also unveiled a few features in the new browser that may
    appeal more to average Web users. For example, right-clicking on a Web
    page will give people more "to-do" options than they'd see today.
    Users will be able to "Send to Facebook," "Map with Live Search" or "Define with Dictionary.com" with a quick click.






    © 2008 Birmingham Post. All rights reserved.
    © 2008 ECT News Network. All rights reserved.
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    NTAEndar
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    Web Standards: How to Untangle the Web We Weave Empty Re: Web Standards: How to Untangle the Web We Weave

    Post by NTAEndar Mon Mar 17, 2008 6:07 am

    The Webs We Weave?! They will be even greater now!

      Current date/time is Mon Apr 29, 2024 7:38 pm