W3C XML 10 Years
There is essentially no computer in the world, desktop, handheld, or backroom, that doesn't process XML sometimes...
On 10 February 1998, W3C published Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 as a W3C Recommendation. W3C would like to thank the dedicated communities -- including people who have participated in W3C's XML groups and mailing lists, the SGML community, and xml-dev -- whose efforts have created a successful family of technologies based on the solid XML 1.0 foundation.
XML Community Greetings
W3C invites you to send an XML10 greeting. Greetings 184 to 181 (of 184 total) displayed below.
Happy Birthday to XML
No need to remind how XML has changed our digital world, and how it has put
itself as a basis for the rest...
Happy birthday and cheers...
Jamal Mavadat
Jamal Mavadat jamal@mavadat.net, sent on 2008-05-09XML Rocks
Greeting, Thanks for making us to talk in one language around the world.
Made communication easier.
sent on 2008-05-08por estrechar a la humanidad
Felicitaciones por hacer más estrecha la humanidad, por hacerla más
cercana, y solidaria en el conocimiento.
Gracias
Nelson Sánchez A.
nelson sanchez redcom99@hotmail.com, sent on 2008-05-06Great
I'm writing a program for editing XML to celebrate it-be sure to celebrate XML's anniversary!
sent on 2008-05-05