<...> Apparently Apple, Mozilla and
Opera have that ambition. Smaller ones, like iCab and lynx, will just have to
follow. But what about Microsoft? I still have the impression that they can
undermine this entire effort by getting people to use authoring tools that on
purpose contain errors that result in 'good' looking pages in Explorer, and
'bad' in HTML5 browsers.
<...>

And how do you imagine Microsoft will get people to use those evil tools?
By pointing a loaded gun to one's head?
IE7's team have expressed their will to improve web standards support in
their product.
And to not forget, IE7 was released mostly because of the rise of Firefox and
other alternatives. Their share is going up, not down, so even if MS had some
evil intentions it is already to late: no sane developer would use a tool which
produces broken result in 20+% of the browsers.



--
Regards,
Rimantas
--
http://rimantas.com/

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