Read: http://blog.outer-court.com/archive/2005-11-17-n52.htmlblackmyst wrote:Nach wrote:The Google homepage purposely doesn't validate.
One of their goals was to sacrifice every standard, as long as it can run and show properly on every used browser. They did this, because they want as little markup as possible so it loads instantly.
Really? I wish every website loaded instantly like that.
I quote:
Q: In more general terms, what do you think is the relationship between Google and the W3C? Do you think it would be important for Google to e.g. be concerned about valid HTML?
A: I like the W3C a lot; if they didn’t exist, someone would have to invent them.People sometimes ask whether Google should boost (or penalize) for valid (or invalid) HTML. There are plenty of clean, perfectly validating sites, but also lots of good information on sloppy, hand-coded pages that don’t validate. Google’s home page doesn’t validate and that’s mostly by design to save precious bytes. Will the world end because Google doesn’t put quotes around color attributes? No, and it makes the page load faster.
Eric Brewer wrote a page while at Inktomi that claimed 40% of HTML pages had syntax errors. We can’t throw out 40% of the web on the principle that sites should validate; we have to take the web as it is and try to make it useful to searchers, so Google’s index parsing is pretty forgiving.