Linked by Kroc Camen on Sat 26th Jun 2010 10:48 UTC
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Member since:
2005-11-10
Yes and no. My website still doesn’t work, but it has progressed. According to the HTML5 spec, the <html>, <head> and <body> tags are optional, and the <body> should be implied when the browser hits a tag that isn’t specific to <head>; IE doesn’t do this right, and in pp3 it does it, but incorrectly puts the HTML5 <header> into the <head> and not the <body>.
Before, I was not convinced they were serious about standards, especially since their announcement about H.264 was so vile (the wording was dishonest to the last period), but this new preview shows firm, measurable commitment to HTML5 and standards. The H.264 thing is a whole ’other battle that goes beyond the scope of just the web and I don’t see Microsoft moving away from H.264 any more than Apple would. For now, WebM will be available for use if installed by the user, and that will be increasingly likely given Google/YouTube.
I’ve been using HTML5 since 2008 and I’ve been advocating to people to get learning it _now_, because by the time IE9 comes, those developers that have sat around waiting for IE will already be left in the dust by developers like me who have been making the most of HTML5 for years already in better browsers. Microsoft will have a struggle getting comfortable IE developers to get a clue.
I firmly believe that HTML5 will be the new base standard by which things get done on the web and IE9 could therefore be a runaway hit.