XML Community Greetings
The greeting card is closed to new entries. Greetings 360 to 341 (of 419 total) displayed below.
In Xcellence
Happy 10th on a language with extensions that can speak for every tongue written, spoken, heard, taped, streamed or relayed on planet earth and to a wonderful effort in keeping it free and standing out as one of the best
frameworks in a well organized website.
Thanks,
Tushar
Tushar J. Patel. tjpatel.sse@gmail.com, sent on 2008-11-14The ten year old revelotion is an ongoing process.
Its been the best thing that has happend in mordern communication system
or mass communication system in last millenium.
Its a revolution in itself.and this revulotion is of ongoing character.
Its has changed the perception all together and has commed up with new avenues withou it the life will never be the same and its difficult to bring the world on a same platform which is as wide as world and as
strechebal as web ...
It has the capacity to confine the world and make it look larger that
lifee...
Hats off WWW....
Tonmoy Chaudhuri tonmoy.chaudhuri@bt.com, sent on 2008-11-14WOW!!!!
It's COOL!
Andrey Korlyuk andrey.korlyuk@gmail.com, sent on 2008-11-13Way to go!!!
Having fun with XML I've created an online cookbook. The recipe pages are written in XML via a form using JavaScript and PHP and are used with a XSL
style sheet.
Stop by and add a recipe!
Also working on a tutorial explaining what I've written.
Frank Davies fjdavies@yahoo.com, sent on 2008-11-13Yay for XML!
Here's to the next ten!
Vlad vladharbuz@gmail.com, sent on 2008-11-09Yapee XML 10 Yearz
Yapee XML 10 Yearz
Jayanta Pattanayak jayantap@hcl.in, sent on 2008-11-05Great
thank you very much. it is very great to be able to use XML and find a
whole new way to implement our database.
cheers to you all, all the way to go.
regards,
Manoj Sherchan
manoj marson_the_champ@hotmail.com, sent on 2008-11-03[from the Balisage conference]
I can refer to SGML as a "simplified subset" of the complicated family of XML-based technologies
David Dubin liam@w3.org, sent on 2008-11-03[from the Balisage conference]
Overheard at a conference years ago: XML has eliminated the distinction between input and output (meaning any Web page can be the input to another)
Lynne liam@w3.org, sent on 2008-11-03[from the Balisage conference]
Disappointing: Lack of good end-user tools, XML-native versions of Word, Excel, etc.
David Lee liam@w3.org, sent on 2008-11-03[from the Balisage conference]
Namespaces are evil.
Yuri Rubinsky - "But wait, there is more!"
Betty Harvey liam@w3.org, sent on 2008-11-03[from the Balisage conference]
"I think, once you agree on a common language,
you can concentrate on high-level things."
Quentin Stafford - Fraser 2001
For me, XML is "Extensible Mother Language" :))
[...]
Keep going!
Muath ALRAMMAL liam@w3.org, sent on 2008-11-03[from the Balisage conference]
XML
X = EXTRA
M = MILLION (THINGS) To
L = LEARN
Sylvain Vallieres liam@w3.org, sent on 2008-11-03[from the Balisage conference]
XML in another ten years will approach the abilities of HyTime and will be "high time."
Patrick Durusau liam@w3.org, sent on 2008-11-03[from the Balisage conference]
If markup languages and technologies hels an Olympics, XML would be a gold
medal winner!
What other standard has led to such a wealth of tools and related specifications? Before XML, when could you read about a markup language in an onboard flight magazine?
Tonya Gaylord liam@w3.org, sent on 2008-11-03[from the Balisage conference]
10 years and STILL NO SHORTREF!
Sam Hunting liam@w3.org, sent on 2008-11-0310yrs Industry
Wish You a great success on this 10yrs
Suresh dhulipudi.suresh@gmail.com, sent on 2008-10-27Awesome XML
It is somewhat remarkable that XML recommendations - namespaces, linking, schemas, stylesheets, and more to the table. What else we can expect from XML, it has changed the whole world wide web scenario.....salute to XML
Madhup Raj raj_madhup@yahoo.co.in, sent on 2008-10-23Greetings
Wish You all the best.
panbhu panbhuselvan@yahoo.in, sent on 2008-10-22Congratulation to XML
All the very best to all the developers and contributors who put their hands on to bring the XML on what it is today. Thanks to everyone and XML for XML10 celebration.
Sourabh Sharma sourabh.sharma@kpitcummins.com, sent on 2008-10-22