Warning: what follows may be considered boring by some readers – especially non-geeks (if there are any).
Ladies and gentlemen, actsofvolition.com is now compliant with the The World Wide Web Consortium’s (W3C) HTML 4.01 Transitional recommendation*.
The good people at The Web Standards Project can explain why adhering to standards matters.
Those who work in web development will know that adhering to these standards is not always easy since some popular browsers don’t interpret them correctly. Netscape 4.x, for example, will have problems rendering a perfectly standards compliant page. Web developers must choose between breaking the standards or having glitches for Netscape 4.x users.
New browsers are much better at interpreting the standards. Internet Explorer 4, 5, 5.5, and 6 all do a decent job and have gotten better and better with each new version (although there are still problems. The new Mozilla browser (aka Netscape 6.x) does an excellent job as do most other alternative browsers such as Opera, iCab, and Konqueror.
The trouble is that loads of people still use Netscape 4.x. While global stats put it’s usage at below 10% of web users, this site and others I help produce have up to 30% of users running Netscape 4.x.
Here on aov, I can (and have) decide to screw Netscape 4.x users in favour of the standards. There are better browsers that are easy to get. However, as a professional web developer (which I am, apparently) I can not make that decision on behalf of my clients. Company XYZ is interested in selling their widget, not ensuring web accessibility and cross-platform-interoperability. Ignoring users is not good business. That said, it is possible to make sites that adhere to the standards (for the most part) and still work relatively well in NS4.x.
Exciting, isn’t it?
* If you actually run our site through the W3C’s Validator, you’ll notice that it doesn’t actually validate, but that’s only because it’s a little confused about some of our URLs and some non-standard characters, which I’m working on.







