==========
Useful opinion, thanks, but your comment prompts the following
personal conclusion: xforms was/is hampered by insufficient web
browser support; xquery by insufficient web server (standard hosting
supplier) support.
===========
 

Not all technologies get adopted by everyone. .
I dont know exactly (but I do know *roughly*) by what you mean by "standard 
hosting supplier" - ie. those that sell the cheapest "web site hosting" 
possible to the most people.
I dont agree that means "hampered" ... it just means " vastly availble for 
nearly nothing" and if that is your most important criteria go for it.
It is generally a circular problem ... 
If you want a *free xquery* hosting provider you can get one today from Amazon 
for 1 year using their free tier support.
After that ... if $2/month vs $7/month is your most important concern then 
xquery isnt for you.

Browser support is a problem for XForms (although I belive there are versions 
which  dont require browser support)
Browser support is a non-issue for XQuery - it is browser agnostic.
If you want the absolutely dirt cheapest "solution" go with a free service like 
most major providers will give you for free (bloggger etc).
you wont get XQuery or even mysql or PHP but you will get a "web site" for 
"free" (typically "free" means your web site will have ads on it).

If cost is your major concern and $2/month vs $7/month is the key factor in 
your decision on what technology you want to learn and use then go with the 
cheapest.
But making claims about technology viability by quoting the bare minimum low 
end just isn't something you will get great resounding agreement with on this 
list.
XQuery can be had for free.
Convincing budget low end web hosting providers to provide it may take a while 
if ever.
Convincing Browser vendors to build it into their browser (let alone XSLT 2.0 
or 3.0 ) ... well I am not holding my breath.
but none of this has to do with the maturity or quality of technology.

As Michael Key said so elegantly, I will paraphrase, if your #1 issue is cost, 
ride the bus.  Or walk for that matter.

There is nothing wrong with that, but you will have a hard time convincing car 
drivers and manufacturers that means that cars are not viable.

----------------------------------------
David A. Lee
[email protected]
http://www.xmlsh.org




_______________________________________________
[email protected]
http://x-query.com/mailman/listinfo/talk

Reply via email to