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Survey: Must journalists disclose? New feature: Radio as a Slides editing tool for Manila. Microsoft: SOAP Toolkit 2.0 Beta 1. Erik Thauvin has updated his Bookmarks-to-OPML script. Which XML-RPC environments support asynchronous calls? Best wishes to Pyra, dealing with an outage on BlogSpot. David Davies on FileMaker 5. Macromedia: Flash Usability Tips. A new SOAP glossary. I expect great things from this site. Scott Rosenberg wants an email program that works. Clay Shirky sees English as the British Navy of today. Press release: Microsoft uses XMetal. Motley Fool: Don't Bet on Patents. Categories ![]() A new idea is going to enter the Scripting News vocabulary. "I started a new category." Predictions for Y2K++ ![]() ![]() Prediction: Al Gore and/or Bill Clinton will become a partner at KPCB. Prediction: The Two-Way-Web, an ever-broadening pipe, will become the focus of the VC community, equal to or exceeding the hype of P2P. (Both will also appear in the Venture Capital category as well.) Continuity ![]() Last night at a geekish party in Menlo Park, I heard the story of HTML 3.0, a 1995 spec produced by a working group of SGML gurus (purists?) to set HTML right. Neither of the major browser vendors participated. Presumably no Web developers participated either. Backward compatibility was not a major goal. It went nowhere. Then came HTML 3.2, which was continuous with earlier versions, and it was adopted, more or less. Discontinuity is a mathematical term. A function has a discontinuity at y if the limit of f(x) as x approaches y is not defined. The derivative of the function is not defined at y. Applied to HTML, there was a discontinuity at 3.0. Tim Bray on Mail Starting 12/20/00. "I think your basic point (continuity wins) is correct, but I don't think you have the right historical example." ![]()
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