The
American Planning Association, Los Angeles Section Web site has
been redesigned according web standards established by the World
Wide Web Consortium (W3C). These standards were created so the
Web could become more accessible and work better for everyone. The vast majority
of new Web browsers support these W3C standards. Unfortunately, some older browsers
do not.
You might consider upgrading to any of the following browsers. Doing so will allow you to use and view the LA APA Web site as the creators intended.
Internet Explorer 6 for Windows delivers fine support for HTML 4, CSS-1, and other important W3C standards. Dont worry if you dont know what that means; the people who build your websites know. The browser is available free of charge.
Internet Explorer 5 Macintosh, released in March 2000, provides superb support for key web standards (CSS, HTML, XHTML, PNG, ECMA-262, DOM Level 1) and an elegant user experience. IE5.1, released December 2001, improves on its predecessor. The browser is available free of charge.
Netscape 6.2 complies with important Web standards, including full support for XML and the DOM. These technologies can help web builders create powerful sites that work well. The browser is available free of charge. Netscape 6.2 fixes bugs in earlier releases, and adds support for Mac OSX. It is based on the standardscompliant Gecko engine and opensource Mozilla, which supports AIX, Linux, Win32, Mac OS, OpenVMS, HPUX, and FreeBSD, and which may be the most compliant of all current browsers.
Opera 6 for Windows, released 13 November 2001, supports many key web standards and a variety of computing platforms. Its lead designer was the chief author of the CSS-1 standard. The browser, which works well even on older PCs with limited power, is available free of charge. (A pay version is also available.) Opera supports Windows, Linux (beta, but works very well), Mac OS (beta, but works very well), and will soon support the OS/2, EPOC, and BeOS platforms.
Konqueror is a fullfeatured, modern graphical browser for Unix/Linux, with excellent support for web standards including HTML 4, CSS-1, ECMAScript, and the DOM Level 1, and partial support for XML and CSS-2. The current version is not at the same level of compliance, however, as Mozilla, IE, and Opera, and some sites may display incorrectly in Konqueror as a result.
The IBM Web Browser is based on Netscape's open source Mozilla project (see above), and offers excellent standards support for folks using IBM's OS2/Warp and Workspace OnDemand.
Visit http://www.webstandards.org