Oh, yes indeed, the page is "fluid," there was
NO assigned width. If one had a wide enough monitor, the whole site could be viewed as ten lines. Not exactly user-friendly when 65-75 characters is known to be a suitable line length. But I'm not sure how it validated with none of the <p> having the approved closing tag "</p>" I think it's either laziness or simple ignorance to allow such a page continue to be used (since 1998, no less). Of course, it could be the fact that it It is about as simple as html can get. All the other tags had proper closing tags. Of course, edited by a 1997 app! Or "generated" by Mozilla/4.5b2, aka Netscape (remember that browser?).
And, while "max-width:" and min-width:" are fairly old properties (CSS2), I don't think Netscape ever understood them since IE didn't until version 7 or 8, well after the creation date of the page.
I doubt that anything he used to prepare the page even included any kind of code/text checking. But I think it is standard practice to insert a "space" behind any punctuation mark, especially a 'period.'
QUOTE
FUD sands for Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt.It is a marketing technique
And that's the very first sentence! "sands"? "Doubt.It"? At first glance I thought he was making a joke!
There are two more instances in the rest of that paragraph. My problem is, I never learned how to scan, I tend to look at every word and the punctuation (which gets messed up by not having spaces used.
So, it's mainly my problem...