Bart Smaalders wrote: > The Internet has created the necessity for a standardized > syntax format for accessing remote object references. In 1994, > IETF published the URI [Uniform Resource Identifier] Specification > [RFC 1630] [76], followed by the URN [Uniform Resource Name] > Specification [RFC 1737] [77] and the URL [Uniform Resource Locator] > Specification [RFC 1738] [16]. Since then, the terms URI, URL and > URN have been used interchangeably. While subtle distinctions > between URI, URL and URN do exist, these differences have become, > in practice, largely academic. > Clearly you haven't programmed in Java, where the API make painful distinctions between URI and URL. 8^)
Otherwise, same comments about library versioning an manpage naming as on 2004/164. - jek3
