It is not owned by anyone as such. It is free to use. The World Wide Web Consortium are the organisation that designs it and sets standards for it.
http://www.devicemanuals.com/guidedownload/Pontiac-Grand-Am-Owner%27s-Manual-2002--==TVRFd01qRXg=.html http://www.devicemanuals.com/guidedownload/Pontiac-Grand-Am-Owner%27s-Manual-2002--==TVRFd01qRXg=.html
The owner of the Web site can change the files with an HTML editor, and copy them to the Web server.
Try going here: http://www.smarthome.com/3106.html
No. Use of copyrighted materials without the written consent of the copyright owner is a crime and you can be legally prosecuted.
http://www.devicemanuals.com/guide/Automobile/Chevrolet/1994-Chevrolet-Camaro-Owner-Manual-==TVRFd01ESTU=.html
There are various ways to accomplish the task. Here is an HTML 5 solution: Author name. you also could use the HTML 4 Author Name, but you get better control by using the HTML 5 style option.
There are links to all the available online Buell Owners manuals at www.BadWeatherBikers.com in "Knowledge Vault >>> Manuals... >>> Owner's Manuals" page. The direct URL is... http://www.badweatherbikers.com/buell/messages/3842/317375.html
The embed code is found below the description- if the owner has allowed it to be embeded. Then Simply copy and paste on your webpage whereever you want it.
HTML tags are used to delimit HTML elements inside an HTML document.
The basic HTML base to a HTML website is <HTML> <title> </title> <head> </head> <body> </body> </HTML>
Its done exactly the same as when you put it in an HTML file. There are 2 ways you can do it: <html> <?php // php stuff ?> </html> Or you can do it like this: <?php echo "<html>"; // php stuff echo "</html>"; ?>
No. HTML existed before XHTML. XHTML combines XML and HTML, so it is an advancement on HTML.