NET LOG

Apropos the start of a new year ?the millennium starts next year ? a major milestone for the Internet arrived Jan. 26. It signaled the end of an era and the beginning of a new stage for the World Wide Web.

By John MakulowichApropos the start of a new year ?the millennium starts next year ? a major milestone for the Internet arrived Jan. 26. It signaled the end of an era and the beginning of a new stage for the World Wide Web.I am talking about the passing of HTML as the markup lingua franca and the ascendancy to the Web throne of XML (extensible markup language), a universal tagging structure that will serve as a foundation for device-independent Web access. It allows commerce to come full force on the Net and will change the way we use this ubiquitous medium in ways we can only just imagine.The event was marked by the issuance of the XHTML 1.0 specification as a recommendation by the World Wide Web Consortium (www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-xhtml-20000126). The consortium W3C, headed by Tim Berners-Lee, who created HTML, noted, "This new specification represents cross-industry and expert community agreement on the importance of XHTML 1.0 as a bridge to the Web of the future."The W3C recommendation release is akin to publishing an article in a peer-reviewed journal. It indicates that the specification is stable, contributes to Web interoperability and was reviewed by the W3C membership. Moreover, it means the membership supports its adoption by the industry.HTML, or hypertext markup language, is the tagging scheme used by individuals to prepare documents that can be rendered by Web browsers.Do this the next time you use your browser, for example, Microsoft Internet Explorer 5. Access a file on the Web. After it comes up in all its vivid glory, first click on the menu item, View, then click on Source. You will see the HTML tags used to produce the page the way the author intended. On your screen at the top will be tags that look like this: , ,