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Read it, comment, and share it with your friendsHTML vs XHTML
What is wrong with this picture?
So much. I don’t even know where to begin. I won’t link where this came from because I don’t want to flame a serious business, but I just wanted to put it out there.
In other news, I’ve spent the weekend working on Construct and I’m about a third of the way to finishing version 0.4. You can check it out now and see if you spot some new features

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9 Comments
Responses to my articleoh yeah, serious business indeed.
I would have thought it was a joke if you were not serious
Don’t you remember the rule that anything with an X in it is better, cooler and more expensive?
Aaron: I’m worried that people are actually falling for that. I’m also wondering what this “business” defines as the difference between HTML and XHTML, and how that could possibly be worth $46.
You know what, using google type “psd to html $29″, the site appear.
Back to topic, the price gap between HTML and XHTML too big.
That’s not all, Patrick. In my opinion, there should be no price gap. Anyone who is any good at HTML/XHTML knows that it doesn’t require any extra work to do one or the other. When I was in this business, I did multiple pages, admittedly for a bit more because I don’t undersell, but it didn’t matter if the client asked for HTML or XHTML, the cost was the same.
LOL. Pay to have it done as HTML and then chuck in a few forward slashes?
In the order form on the right, in the alleged website the ‘coding requirement’ field has two options
HTML + CSS [with table]
XHTML + CSS [tableless]
Which makes me think that psd to HTML is table based layout and psd to XHTML is tableless. Misinterpretation or thats what they are defining as the difference perhaps?
webmack: It looks like that’s what they are defining as the difference. That’s a shame, because they are selling sub-par work at a very low price, which would probably lead most customers to buy the sub-par work when they really ought to invest in something more future-proof (and I’m not implying that XHTML is more future-proof at all; I’m implying that tableless layouts are more future-proof).
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