It seems a bit confusing as to which web standard we should be using for an average website these days.
Back in the days of HTML 4 and HTML 4.01 it was a simple decision between Frameset, Transitional or Strict. Choosing between these simply depended on what sort of site you were building but we were encouraged to try to build a Strict site so that we would have the best browser cross-compatibility (with sensible browsers anyway... IE6 I'm looking at you...).
When XHTML 1.0 came along it was basically the same thing as HTML but implemented using XML. The decision was much the same: Frameset, Transitional or Strict, and once again, we were encouraged to use Strict where possible. It seemed like XHTML was the way forwards and I, along with many other web developers, began coding all my sites using XHTML instead of HTML.
XHTML 1.1 took this one step further by eliminating support for the Frameset and Transitional DTDs. This seemed like a logical progression because ever since HTML 4.0 we had been encouraged to create more strictly formatted web pages.
However, now with the introduction of HTML 5 we seem to be going backwards... Sure, HTML 5 introduces loads of application oriented structures which is great, but why couldn't they just do it in XHTML? Why not create XHTML 2.0 with all the new things they've introduced in HTML 5 rather than confusing us by going back to the old way of doing things in HTML.
Am I supposed to change all my sites from XHTML 1.1 to HTML 5 now in the interests of progress? And will XHTML 2.0 basically be to HTML 5 what XHTML 1.0 was to HTML 4?
What is the reasoning behind continuing to develop HTML when XHTML is still clearly the future?
You are clueless. The updates are done in the background so the next time you open Edge the updates are applied automatically. There is no need to close all your tabs. Just keep browsing like you normally do. Clearly you don't use Edge and are just one of those haters that complain for the sake of complaining.
Microsoft is busy. Lots of changes to be released imminently for Windows server or soon. Also, lots happening for next version as well.
Third party virus scanning software is being moved out of Kernel mode to avoid repeat of Crowdstrike incident.
Windows Protected Mode and Windows Ready Print no longer require third party print drivers to be installed.
New storage stack being developed. New NVME drivers now available for Windows Server 2025 to improve local NVME drive performance by 60+ percent. NVME-Of of fabric being worked on for next release to improve network access to NVME drives.
ReFs (next file system) now has ability to boot and will become default file system in next release of Windows Server. ReFs improves on NTFS in several areas including resiliency and reliability and scalability.
New update stack is being worked on to unify Windows updates, and updates for drivers and first party/3rd party application software.
A stricter and more robust third-party driver certification program (ODI) is being worked on to improve performance, thermals, battery life, and reliability on modern Windows hardware by tightening how OEMs and IHVs (Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, NVIDIA, etc.) build and ship drivers.
There is a tone more but too numerous to mention.
Now disable that stupid OneDrive backup request when Windows starts please. So unbelievably frustrating to only have “remind me later” instead of “no and never ask me again”
Question
Nick Brunt
It seems a bit confusing as to which web standard we should be using for an average website these days.
Back in the days of HTML 4 and HTML 4.01 it was a simple decision between Frameset, Transitional or Strict. Choosing between these simply depended on what sort of site you were building but we were encouraged to try to build a Strict site so that we would have the best browser cross-compatibility (with sensible browsers anyway... IE6 I'm looking at you...).
When XHTML 1.0 came along it was basically the same thing as HTML but implemented using XML. The decision was much the same: Frameset, Transitional or Strict, and once again, we were encouraged to use Strict where possible. It seemed like XHTML was the way forwards and I, along with many other web developers, began coding all my sites using XHTML instead of HTML.
XHTML 1.1 took this one step further by eliminating support for the Frameset and Transitional DTDs. This seemed like a logical progression because ever since HTML 4.0 we had been encouraged to create more strictly formatted web pages.
However, now with the introduction of HTML 5 we seem to be going backwards... Sure, HTML 5 introduces loads of application oriented structures which is great, but why couldn't they just do it in XHTML? Why not create XHTML 2.0 with all the new things they've introduced in HTML 5 rather than confusing us by going back to the old way of doing things in HTML.
Am I supposed to change all my sites from XHTML 1.1 to HTML 5 now in the interests of progress? And will XHTML 2.0 basically be to HTML 5 what XHTML 1.0 was to HTML 4?
What is the reasoning behind continuing to develop HTML when XHTML is still clearly the future?
/rant :laugh:
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