"What should happen 'yesterday' is a web page singing the glories of OXT with some illustrative stuff."
I fully agree, I'll add "develop impressive professional Web 3.0 animated website" to my spare-time to-do list.
I did actually fixed those spelling errors (mostly due to not having time to proof read it), on that HTML 1.0 1990s compatible website (search "HTML ONLY! Web", apparently kids today find that difficult to make plain HTML pages these days, for some reason?).
I also update the main page to have a menu bar and added an xTalk Related Links page here:
https://www.openxtalk.org/OXTLinks.html
Feel free to proof read my misspelling prone work some more!
I may move some web pages to be hosted on GitHub and then anyone who can use GitHub's basic editor web UI could contribute the OXT project pages more easily. The links page is practically one of those "Awesome Whatever" links sites ("Awesome Lua" for example) commonly found in GitHub repos.
Of course people are welcome to send in a fully formed whizz-bang Web 3.0 website they built with Dreamweaver (I know that's on the outs) or whatever other editor as well.
[quote]"What should happen 'yesterday' is a web page singing the glories of OXT with some illustrative stuff."[/quote]
I fully agree, I'll add "develop impressive professional Web 3.0 animated website" to my spare-time to-do list. :lol:
I did actually fixed those spelling errors (mostly due to not having time to proof read it), on that HTML 1.0 1990s compatible website (search "HTML ONLY! Web", apparently kids today find that difficult to make plain HTML pages these days, for some reason?).
I also update the main page to have a menu bar and added an xTalk Related Links page here:
https://www.openxtalk.org/OXTLinks.html
Feel free to proof read my misspelling prone work some more!
I may move some web pages to be hosted on GitHub and then anyone who can use GitHub's basic editor web UI could contribute the OXT project pages more easily. The links page is practically one of those "Awesome Whatever" links sites ("Awesome Lua" for example) commonly found in GitHub repos.
Of course people are welcome to send in a fully formed whizz-bang Web 3.0 website they built with Dreamweaver (I know that's on the outs) or whatever other editor as well.