>>13
That would be my take too. We can have one guy who spends all his time pointing at things that everyone agrees could be done better. Maybe one time in 100 things will actually change.
I know that most of mainstream computing has consisted of people making things up as they went or reacting to things that were never intended to really catch on, but that sense is doubly profound when I look at the web. Maybe it's just because I'm less caught up in it that makes me more critical, but, really - text markup and a switchblade kit scripting language are what runs the world now? This is the best we could do?