[TriLUG] I'm available for presentations at your LUG meetings

Steve Litt via TriLUG trilug at trilug.org
Mon Feb 9 19:17:48 EST 2026


Hi Maryam,

August 13 at 6:45PM Eastern Daylight Time is perfect for me.

Just so we're all on the same page, I would be presenting this
remotely, because I'm almost 700 miles away. Jitsi would be ideal
because I use it for GoLUG meetings and for my Universal
Troubleshooting Process courses. I can *probably* use Big Blue Button
or Zoom, but we'd need to verify that first.

So as long as you're cool with a remote presentation, I'm on it like a
squirrel on a tree! 8/13/2026, the 22'nd anniversary of Hurricane
Charley hitting Orlando!

Thanks,

SteveT

Steve Litt 

http://444domains.com


Maryam Abkar said on Sun, 8 Feb 2026 14:46:30 -0500

>Hello Steve Litt,
>
>We would love to host this talk at TriLUG! the next available meeting
>slot is August 13th, 2026.
>Let me know if that works for you, or any other month after that :)
>
>Thanks for reaching out!
>Maryam A.
>
>On Sun, Feb 8, 2026 at 2:09 AM Steve Litt via TriLUG
><trilug at trilug.org> wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> My 45 minute "HTML Derivation Via W3C Validator and xmlchecker.py"
>> presentation was well received at GoLUG the other night, so I'd like
>> to refine it and present it at a few other LUGs and/or BSD groups
>> using Jitsi, Big Blue Button or Zoom remote meetings.
>>
>> The eight minute first segment highlights the following:
>>
>> * Benefit of writing valid HTML.
>>
>> * 2 Benefits of really knowing and understanding HTML.
>>
>> * 3 Benefits of making your HTML also be well formed XML.
>>
>> * Benefits of deriving HTML from the W3C validator and xmlchecker.py.
>>
>> * Mention of the three tools: W3C validator, xmlchecker.py, and a
>>   browser.
>>
>> * Mention that installation of W3C validator and xmlchecker.py will
>> be detailed later in the presentation.
>>
>> The next segment derives a valid "Hello World" HTML starting from an
>> empty file using the W3C validator exclusively, and then makes it
>> well formed XML with the aid of the xmlchecker.py XML well formedness
>> checker. We then correct this valid HTML written in well formed XML
>> to be what we all know should really be in an HTML file.
>>
>> The next segment enlarges the HTML file with a few more lines, proves
>> that HTML can be valid even if it's not well formed XML, and shows
>> how to convert it to well formed XML. This segment features more
>> sophisticated use of the W3C validator and xmlchecker.py.
>>
>> The next segment unveils use of a time saving debugging technique
>> useful on any HTML which is also intended to be well formed XML, and
>> also gives a peek at CSS.
>>
>> The next segment details the installation of both the W3C validator,
>> which can be a massive headache if the wrong Internet instructions
>> are followed, and the dead-bang easy installation of xmlchecker.py.
>>
>> The final segment is a wrapup of the presentation, and should finish
>> within 45 minutes of the start.
>>
>>
>>           <<< NOTE >>>
>> I also have a similar presentation for Rust, which I can give at any
>> LUG or BSD group.
>>
>> SteveT
>>
>> Steve Litt
>> Technical Trainer
>> http://www.troubleshooters.com
>> --
>> This message was sent to: Maryam A. <mabkar124 at gmail.com>
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