BROWSER INCOMPATIBILITIES INCREASE WEB SITE COSTS AND THREATEN TO FRAGMENT THE WEB, ACCORDING TO LEADING WEB DEVELOPERS Los Angeles, August 10, 1998 - Resolving incompatibilities among browsers adds at least 25 percent to the cost of building Web sites, according to The Web Standards Project (WSP), a newly-formed international coalition of leading Web developers dedicated to promoting a worldwide standard for Web and browser design. Calling on browser makers to live up to promises made in July 1997, the WSP ( http://www.webstandards.org ) is urging browser makers to fully support the standards created by the Worldwide Web Consortium (W3C) in the upcoming round of browser releases, as well as support emerging standards that are being developed. Otherwise, contends the WSP, millions of dollars will continue to be wasted each year on Web development. "The time for proprietary innovation in Web browsers is past," says Glenn Davis, Chief Technology Officer of Project Cool, Inc., a Palo Alto-based educational resource center for Web development. "It's time for the browsers to start fully supporting W3C core standards - standards that Microsoft and Netscape helped develop and promised to support - so that people building Web sites can spend more time building better sites and less time fighting browsers over compatibility issues that create unneeded expenses for everyone, at every level of the Web." Currently, beta versions of both Netscape's Navigator 4.5 and Microsoft's Internet Explorer 5.0 are adding more proprietary enhancements without providing complete support for existing standards. >>Because the 5.0 browsers will likely become a new baseline for desktop >>browsers due to their support for XML, the WSP believes that resolving the current patchwork support for HTML, Cascading Style Sheets, Document Object Model and ECMAScript is crucial. "Because Web developers have to build multiple versions or perform time-consuming workarounds to accommodate visitors on different browsers, most shy away from using proprietary features because of the extra costs involved," says George Olsen, >>Design Director and Web Architect at 2-Lane Media in Los Angeles. "While clients may want to see these features, few of them are willing to pay for having the site built more than once." In addition to increasing the cost of Web sites, the lack of common standards is breeding a sense of frustration among developers who face the progressively difficult task of performing workaround upon workaround. "Most of my design ideas are really simple, but executing them consistently across Internet Explorer 3 & 4, as well as Navigator 3 & 4 is anything but," says Jeffrey Zeldman, a New York Web publisher/designer. "I have to engage in laborious workarounds, simply to end up with a very basic design that works." This lack of consistent support for sophisticated presentation standards, such as Cascading Style Sheets, has its long-term effects as well, according to the WSP. As the difficulty of building new workarounds on top of older ones increases, developers will focus on simpler solutions rather than concentrate on longevity. "In the absence of standards for these great technologies, we tend to create disposable content dismissively instead of sticking to a solid foundation for the long-term," says Martin Diekhoff, Web/Applications Developer for the Getty Information Institute. Todd Fahrner, Design Technologist for Studio Verso in San Francisco, adds, "browser makers should try to take the long view, and realize that surviving the 'browser war' won't matter much if the Web itself breaks apart. Supporting the standards might sound like an altruistic goal in a competitive market, but developers and their clients are losing patience with compromised support for baseline standards like CSS1." "The current problem will only be further complicated with the rise of television-based and PDA-based Web browsers," said Ann Navarro, owner of WebGeek Communications in Carmel Valley, CA, and treasurer for the HTML Writers Guild. Navarro said the WSP is also urging browser makers to participate in and support the efforts of the W3C's recently formed Mobile Access group, which will be developing standards for PDA and cell phone-based Web browsers. # # # # About the Web Standards Project The WSP's primary objective is to advance the Web development industry. Its effort to bring attention to the existing and potential problems involved with browser incompatibility does not mean the WSP is opposed to innovations by browser manufacturers. The coalition merely urges browser manufacturers to use open standards for enhancements and support existing ones before adding new features.