if it's client side includes you're after, then it can be done very easily using XSLT http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt/
XSLT lets you format the final output of XML data in any way you want - seperating the content from the layout, in the same way that CSS lets you seperate the content/layout from the style.
Oh yes, and even Internet Explorer has XSLT support!
re: vegetarianism etc
in the grand scheme of things there's only a miniscule genetic difference between humans and animals though : http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/ a/2004/05/08/GENES.TMP&type=science Humans are animals too afterall, and if plants make concessions for other plants with a similar genetic make-up... What i'm trying to say is that animals are very close to us in the food chain. Isn't the sensible thing to expand our gene pool, by consuming foods of the most fundamental type, and with the genes most diverse from ourselves, instead of constricting it?
The 80% that still use IE use it because they don't have (or don't believe they have) the technical skills to use firefox. I don't think it's bacause they lack the technical skills to *use* it, rather that they lack the technical skills/knowledge to understand *why they would be better off* using it.
XSLT lets you format the final output of XML data in any way you want - seperating the content from the layout, in the same way that CSS lets you seperate the content/layout from the style.
Oh yes, and even Internet Explorer has XSLT support!
re: vegetarianism etc in the grand scheme of things there's only a miniscule genetic difference between humans and animals though : http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/ a/2004/05/08/GENES.TMP&type=science Humans are animals too afterall, and if plants make concessions for other plants with a similar genetic make-up... What i'm trying to say is that animals are very close to us in the food chain. Isn't the sensible thing to expand our gene pool, by consuming foods of the most fundamental type, and with the genes most diverse from ourselves, instead of constricting it?
you can still compare games on different platforms, just not *DX10* based games. There's a short performance comparison under XP/Vista/Linux here for example : http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item =681&num=1