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HTML 4.01 -> XHTML 1.0 -> XHTML 1.1 -> HTML 5 -> ?
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Nick Brunt,
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By +pmrd · Posted
Was it too much to ask to show the icon in this article? -
By Case_f · Posted
Frankly, I blame whoever is writing such articles. "A big improvement/update and/or new feature is now available to everyone! Also, use this unofficial tweak tool to enable it because it actually isn't available to you yet officially and might not in fact even be entirely ready or whatever, hence why it is perhaps not enabled for you*. But it's great and you should enable it!" I mean there's nothing wrong with sharing info about some feature you might need to enable via unofficial means, of course. It's just that these articles tend to essentially end up being two news pieces in one, and one of them tends to be a bit misleading. (*Yes, yes, the "it's a controlled rollout!" thing. Not a fan of that one either. The argument, not the actual rollout.) -
By wrack · Posted
Thank you. Will do. I read in the release notes that editor config might be at play here. -
By eiffel_g · Posted
Actually, I think even Microsoft doesn't know how to control it -
By pradeepviswav · Posted
OpenAI is making Codex more useful in Chrome and the cloud by Pradeep Viswanathan OpenAI's Codex now has more than 5 million users, up nearly 4x from earlier this year. To further accelerate Codex's growth among developers, OpenAI today announced that it has agreed to acquire Ona, a company that builds secure cloud execution and orchestration technology for developers. Ona will enable developers to run Codex with persistent and controlled cloud infrastructure for long-running agentic workflows. Right now, most Codex execution happens locally on developers' laptops and PCs, and the agents work continuously for hours. Through Ona, OpenAI aims to make Codex agents keep working for days without being tied to a user’s local machine or an active session. This will be an important capability for enterprises that want to deploy AI agents in production while maintaining control over infrastructure, data, security boundaries, credential scope, logging, and review workflows. Like any acquisition, the deal is still subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals. Until the deal closes, OpenAI and Ona will continue to operate as separate companies. After closing, Ona’s team will join the Codex team to improve developer workflows. Alongside the Ona acquisition announcement, OpenAI today introduced a few Codex updates. Developers can now save Codex rate limit resets and use them later instead of losing them when they are not needed immediately. OpenAI is also adding a referral option where users can invite a friend to Codex and get a saved rate limit reset. OpenAI today also announced a developer mode for browser use in Chrome and the Codex in-app browser. With this mode, Codex can use the Chrome DevTools Protocol to debug web apps, inspect pages, and work more directly with browser-based development workflows. Developers can use this when they want Codex to profile JavaScript, inspect console output and network traffic, examine web page states including the DOM and applied styles, and more.
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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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