There was a topic on that a while ago and I am now reading Introducing HTML 5 from Bruce Lawson and Remy Sharp (pages 58-59) in mental hospital. It is not so bad as it seems, but I do not read email every day. They do not have wireless :( All four are valid in html5: em and strong marks up for emphasis/importance that subtly changes the meaning of the sentence. Examples: "Do you live in Paris?" <p>Np, my <em>name</em> is Paris. I live in <em>Ljubljana</em>.</p><p><strong>Warning! This is a nudistic beach</strong></p> <i>:alternate voice or mood, taxonomic designation, technical term, idiomatic phrase from another language, a thought, a ship name or prose whose typographical presentation is italicized <p>The <i>Titanic</i> sails.</p><p>The design needs a bit more <i lang="fr">ooh la la</i></p><p><i>Gluteus maximus</i> <b>:no extra importance, key words, document abstract, product names in a review or just spans of text whose typicial typographic presentation is boldened. <p>I like <b>ice cream</b>, so for my birthday they gave me <b>an ice cream maker machine</b> It is no longer necessary to put attributes in quotes unless there is space in the attribute word. But I still put them :). <small> is now for smallprint copyright notice - the meaning of small has changed</small> <applet> is deprecated, use <embed> instead and <embed> is not deprecated anymore. And it is a very good book so far (two chapters). ♥♥♥ When the sun rises I receive and when it sets I forgive! ♥♥♥ ˜♥ -> http://moj.skavt.net/gleskovs/ <- ♥ Always, Grega Leskovšek -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php