Developers would rather fork the Web than admit Chrome is the new IE6 and stop targeting it.
htmlenjoyye 3 minutes ago [-]
> A page can then be tested against the standard and reject or accept as compliant. Pages that don't conform with the specification won't be rendered. It is explicitly forbidden for clients to accept any page that doesn't conform with the specification.
it's as if nothing was learned from the XHTML debacle
jfengel 18 minutes ago [-]
I feel like that's not solving any of the problems I think of the Web as having.
You can certainly make something with it, but I can't imagine most people finding a use for it.
smugglerFlynn 4 minutes ago [-]
I think original web standards were solving a completely different problem: sharing information.
Modern Internet is 45% appearances and 50% search traffic optimizations. For better or worse we lost all usable registries of websites, we lost appearance-less and traffic considerations-less websites. Information-focused Web is pretty much dead.
Maybe these ideas did not scale and did not monetize that well, but we will never really know what information-focused version of Internet would have looked like because evolution took it elsewhere. Unless we try building another one with different principles and limitations at the core.
OutOfHere 3 minutes ago [-]
At this point we need a fork of not just the web but the entire internet, one built for privacy.
roschdal 4 minutes ago [-]
I support forking the web, into the simple information web services that the web started with. This is a magnificent idea.
thealistra 20 minutes ago [-]
Seems like somebody is not accepting that every successful project will grow and become unwieldy like this. This is all legacy backwards compatibility of all iterated ideas that now you have to support.
Rendered at 12:48:59 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
it's as if nothing was learned from the XHTML debacle
You can certainly make something with it, but I can't imagine most people finding a use for it.
Modern Internet is 45% appearances and 50% search traffic optimizations. For better or worse we lost all usable registries of websites, we lost appearance-less and traffic considerations-less websites. Information-focused Web is pretty much dead.
Maybe these ideas did not scale and did not monetize that well, but we will never really know what information-focused version of Internet would have looked like because evolution took it elsewhere. Unless we try building another one with different principles and limitations at the core.