On 11/27/05, David Ulevitch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On Nov 27, 2005, at 7:52 PM, Jeremy David wrote: > > > Right now, OpenBSD.org's layout and design relies on a lot of old > > hacks, > > which break down for many users. I find that unacceptable, just as > > I find > > the general attitude that something is good enough when it clearly > > could be > > better with a little effort to be unacceptable. > > You're giving a matter of opinion as fact. Some of us find the > documentation, man pages and faq, to be refreshingly simple, clear > and concise.
No. It's actually fact. It works for you and that's great. It works for me too. But because the HTML code is admittedly non-standard, the web-pages simply don't work for some people on some systems. I find the content of openbsd.org to be superb. However, the way it is delivered could be made to be functional and accessible for everyone, including people using computer systems and browsers you've never heard of, and the blind. - Jeremy P.S. Most people think that the web-site could look more snazzy. The idea that it doesn't look sharp is somewhere between opinion and fact, but that's really not what I'm talking about here. I'm talking about using valid XHTML and CSS to make valid code that can work for everyone. ( But would it really hurt so bad if it looked impressive too? )