But Rob, this is not something between me and you. I understand I
started the thread taking as an occasion your reply, but the scope we
are dealing with, and which merely springs from that occasion, spans
beyond it by such a degree and in so obvious a manner, that in no way
you should misread it as something between you and me.
I also understand that you may think terms like "uncorrectly" are in a
non formally correct spelling, but you also have to realize that here
on these groups, which are open to an international audience and that
so many persons from all around the globe read, it is just impossible
that we are all native english speaker. I am not in fact, so you should
be indulgent with my possible mistakes, and you shouldn't use my
possible grammatical mistakes as an argument to gain a point in a cause
that cannot be won anyway.
I am not here to invent a thesis. Like yourself, I am too a person who
is adult and who can produce an intellectual effort in order to stress
the importance of something that is corroborated by facts, not
uncorroborated. As said I do not mean I can be beyond critics, but I
find it intellectually impossible to dismiss a list like the one I
provide upon the bases you attempt to propose.
Mozilla validated, true: yet, as they can surely confirm to you if they
are honest, when I did the list on the nefarious day sept 11 2005, it
didn't. Now, in such long a list, if all we are left with is the
desperate search of a link incorrectly listed as invalidated so to
uphold it as an alleged disqualification of the whole list, we have
been left with very little, and we are clearly scrambling for a
desperate line of defence at the bottom of the barrel. If we are left
with that, we are actually proving the strenght of the list, NOT its
weakness.
We have a list that not only is long, but that by its very same length
could have been longer.
Most importantly, the names listed in such list are stunning ones: they
are not a part of the internet, they are the internet.
Now, relieved of any burden of proof as you deem yourself while, yet,
at the same time you perceive yourself as having a stake in this cause,
you shift all the burden of the proof on me, apparently claiming that I
sholuld be endowed with titanic shoulders and that I, who have already
provided a proof, should none the less provide even more which you
yopurself acknowledge as nearly impossible - yet at the same time you
contend in this cause, and you feel like you yourself, although
contending, have to provide NO proof while you attempt to disqualify
the work of the others sitting on such maginficently convenient
position.
You have there that list. You can group it yourself by errors. Do you
know what a good work that list is? So good that in order to have what
you ask for, you just have to click the links and you shall have
instantly all the numbers you covet:
Read them, I do this on your behalf though to you all it would have
required is to move your finger and click:
yahoo 281 errors
AOL 277 errors
altavista 38 errors
excite 235
Netscape 101
Lycos 170
Google 51
NBC 317
Ebay 222
Monster com 256
Even just before these NAMES and these NUMBERS, you should feel you
can't defend the position any longer ALREADY.
Even at such early stage, because you can NOLt dismiss with any
CREDIBILTY the ENORMITY that is simply in those few lines.
The W3C validator is utterly meaningless, and the sooner we quit
sponsoring it as a tool worth being listened to, the better, because it
is CAPABLE of relinquishing RESULTS LIKE THOSE, which are clearly
crazy.
Now, the contents of these sites change daily. I am sure now you would
suggest I should first group, and then update daily these groups, or
even better more times on a daily basis since these sites are all
updated more than once daily. The funny side is that you appear serious
when you attempt to claim this as a valid objection and that I INDEED
should have been required to do it or you would just ignore what those
NUMBERS and NAMES spell so clearly :-)
So, we have also results like:
tucows 56 errors
Intel 42
Epson 12
Canon 8
American Association for the Advancement of Science 127
Linux 22
Motorola 96
web pro news 299
Visa 23
Your line of reasoning is that since some sites have more errors and
some less, this to some degree should invalidate the list. But the list
is valid insofar as those sites are invalid. And how many errors are
enough to be invalid, since for the W3C ONE is enough?
And if less errors equals to something that is more compliant, the
outcome that says that Canon is more compliant than Yahoo and Excite,
is a point that does NOT support your position: it supports the
CONTRARY. Because when we speak of the internet, we speak much more the
declension of Excite and Yahoo than that of Canon and Epson. So what
matters if some sites have less errors, when the reasoning ends up in a
short circuiting ANYWAY?
And however we can't be more presidential than the president. If the
w3c says that an error is enough to disqualify the validity of a page,
you cannot correct the sentence the w3c gives giving a different
sentence and declaring in the same line that this latter, which denies
the former, defends the former.
You are on grounds you can't defend Rob.
And you attempt to cope with this by chicanery. Now, I was born in the
country of Machiavelli so I do not consider chicanery an irrelevant or
despicable art. But we have an objective problem Rob, a W3C that
disqualifies as invalid nearly the whole of the internet, and if you
think that by desperately attempting to deny this fact scrambling for
marginal advantages may work for the sake or in the interest of the
W3C, keep in mind that it won't.
There isNO point in upholding a position that clearly cannot be
defended before such list and the numbers it yields and the names it
involves, and the best defence that I sponsor for the W3C and which you
should sposor too is that the W3C should CHANGE its own approach to
what valiadtion is, and to what should be considered as valid and
invalid.
The W3C is not God. But you deal with it as if it were.
The W3C is wrong. That list proves it. We cannot declare invalid the
whole of the world after rules we ourselves made and clearly nearly
everybody violates, and evryobdies that MATTER, and at the same time
say that we are right. It's a tautology that has to be corrected.
The W3C validation, as it is now, makes NO sense.
And all the chicanery of the world can't change this fact, which that
liost proves beyond any doubt, beyond any reasonable doubt, befeore
whateve court of unbiased men and women.
ciao, and btw it has been a pleasure to talk with you - but of course
if the defense of the indefendible must resort to these arguments,
there is no longer any point in debating. If you have personal reasons,
which I do n ot contend, by which don't want or can't afford to see W3C
validation is a CLEAR mess deprived of any meaning as it CURRENTLY is,
there is neither really anything I can say, nor any possible evidence
that can be brought forth that shall be able to make you change your
mind in the LEAST, no matter how sound the reasonings are, no matter
how evident the evidence is. Because even in the most perfect work you
can find a flaw, so all the more in the obscure work of an obscure man
like myself who just rtries to make blatant what is patent already: the
W3C validation, as it is NOW, makes JUST NO SENSE whatever.
Alberto
http://www.unitedscripters.com/spell...texplorer.html