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<title>InsideRIA</title>
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<id>tag:insideria.com,2008-01-28://34</id>
<updated>2009-07-30T14:00:00Z</updated>
<subtitle>InsideRIA.com is an online community developed by O’Reilly and sponsored by Adobe Systems Incorporated. Our goal is to create an invaluable resource for information on the ever-changing state of design and development of rich Internet applications (RIAs).</subtitle>
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<entry>
<title>Yes, you can now use quite a bit of SVG in the Internet Explorer too. With Ample SDK.</title>
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<published>2009-07-30T14:00:00Z</published>
<updated>2009-07-30T14:00:00Z</updated>

<summary>The Scalable Vector Graphics technology, SVG in short, seems to be experiencing nowadays its second (or third?) birth on the web. The browser vendors are investing heavily into lifting up what they initially prototyped long time before. This is true of Opera, Firefox, Safari and Chrome, but there is no clear indication on the plans to supporting SVG from the major browser vendor - Microsoft. True, Microsoft has recently made a vague statement on its commitment to support the standards and the thrilling web-as-a-platform thing aka HTML5, but in what extent and when? And what shall we do until that time has come, or until the older IE browser park has updated?</summary>
<author>
<name>Sergey Ilinsky</name>
<uri>http://www.ilinsky.com</uri>
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The Scalable Vector Graphics technology, SVG in short, seems to be experiencing nowadays its second (or third?) birth on the web. The browser vendors are investing heavily into lifting up what they initially prototyped long time before. This is true of Opera, Firefox, Safari and Chrome, but there is no clear indication on the plans to supporting SVG from the major browser vendor - Microsoft. True, Microsoft has recently made a vague statement on its commitment to support the standards and the thrilling web-as-a-platform thing aka HTML5, but in what extent and when? And what shall we do until that time has come, or until the older IE browser park has updated?
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