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RE: text/xhtml+xml vs. application/xhtml+xml: msg#00055ietf.xml-mime
> But the analogy is gravely flawed in any case -- text/html > has proved to have no value whatsoever. And this goes far > beyond the notion of "good" and "bad" use. I think the millions of messages sent using text/html would disprove the notion that "text/html has proved to have no value whatsoever". It seems to me that you are projecting a subjective analysis. It's fair to say that text/html is not being used as intended. That is not the same as saying it is of no use. Anyway, the genie *is* out of the bag. > > because again, of (supposed) interoperability, and because they > > didn't have any escape route. > > Sure they did. Application/html combined with a content-disposition > label of "inline" offers all the benefits and has none of the > problems. If that is the case then why didn't the MUA's adopt this? > > With HTML, the genie is already out of the bottle, but with XML > > there is a chance to get MUA's working as they should: when > > sending textual data, use text/xml, but when sending application > > specific data, send application/foo+xml, etc. > > In case it isn't obvious, I am strongly opposed to this policy. It's obvious, but that doesn't discount it. |
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