The Story So Far—The History of HTML5
HTML goes back a long way. It was first published as an Internet draft in 1993. The ’90s saw an
enormous amount of activity around HTML, with version 2.0, versions 3.2, and 4.0 (in the same year!),
and finally, in 1999, version 4.01. In the course of its development, the World Wide Web Consortium
(W3C) assumed control of the specification.
After the rapid delivery of these four versions though, HTML was widely considered a dead-end; the
focus of web standards shifted to XML and XHTML, and HTML was put on the back burner. In the
meantime, HTML refused to die, and the majority of content on the web continued to be served as
HTML. To enable new web applications and address HTML’s shortcomings, new features and
specifications were needed for HTML.
Wanting to take the web platform to a new level, a small group of people started the Web Hypertext
Application Working Group (WHATWG) in 2004. They created the HTML5 specification. They also began
working on new features specifically geared to web applications—the area they felt was most lacking. It
was around this time that the term Web 2.0 was coined. And it really was like a second new web, as static
web sites gave way to more dynamic and social sites that required more features—a lot more features.
The W3C became involved with HTML again in 2006 and published the first working draft for
HTML5 in 2008, and the XHTML 2 working group stopped in 2009. Another two years passed, and that is
where we stand today. Because HTML5 solves very practical problems (as you will see later), browser
vendors are feverishly implementing its new features, even though the specification has not been
completely locked down. Experimentation by the browsers feeds back into and improves the
specification. HTML5 is rapidly evolving to address real and practical improvements to the web
platform.
HTML goes back a long way. It was first published as an Internet draft in 1993. The ’90s saw an
enormous amount of activity around HTML, with version 2.0, versions 3.2, and 4.0 (in the same year!),
and finally, in 1999, version 4.01. In the course of its development, the World Wide Web Consortium
(W3C) assumed control of the specification.
After the rapid delivery of these four versions though, HTML was widely considered a dead-end; the
focus of web standards shifted to XML and XHTML, and HTML was put on the back burner. In the
meantime, HTML refused to die, and the majority of content on the web continued to be served as
HTML. To enable new web applications and address HTML’s shortcomings, new features and
specifications were needed for HTML.
Wanting to take the web platform to a new level, a small group of people started the Web Hypertext
Application Working Group (WHATWG) in 2004. They created the HTML5 specification. They also began
working on new features specifically geared to web applications—the area they felt was most lacking. It
was around this time that the term Web 2.0 was coined. And it really was like a second new web, as static
web sites gave way to more dynamic and social sites that required more features—a lot more features.
The W3C became involved with HTML again in 2006 and published the first working draft for
HTML5 in 2008, and the XHTML 2 working group stopped in 2009. Another two years passed, and that is
where we stand today. Because HTML5 solves very practical problems (as you will see later), browser
vendors are feverishly implementing its new features, even though the specification has not been
completely locked down. Experimentation by the browsers feeds back into and improves the
specification. HTML5 is rapidly evolving to address real and practical improvements to the web
platform.