> Then there's XSLFO... but from what I've read that's more
> aimed at the printed
> word, and all the examples I've seen are diplayed as PDF files.
They are, and given how long CSS support has taken I wouldn't
bet on XSLFO support in browsers ever.
-But- ... a true XSLFO browser with client-side XSLT might find itself a
market niche in some world where the better display semantics (than HTML)
would make a difference. Financial services, medical informatics,
accounting? SEC filings? XML/XSLT could radically improve the transparency
of certain kinds of information sets. And FO does have some features that'd
be very nice for hypertext.