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Jesper Tverskov wrote: > The perspective is not that HTML5 is deprecated in the long run and > that XHTML5 will take over one day. The perspective is rather, that we > finish off even the lip service about the XHTML5 track next time > around. Who cares, no one is using it. Nobody is using HTML5 either really. > All major > browsers today use incremental rendering of XML webpages. Now under > the "HTML5" brand, it is much easier to use XHTML and the web is on > the move again, still young and exciting. By "all major browsers" you probably mean PC-alike desktop browsers rather than browsers for embedded devices etc which are arguably considerably more numerous and the use of which is on a sharp increase (as opposed to the PC-alikes which are pretty stagnant). I have a fairly new phone and its browser doesn't do HTML5. It doesn't matter that much though as I haven't yet found a website which either required an HTML5 browser or for which the use of HTML5 would add significantly to its usability or enjoyment.
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