+<%doc>
+For some totally irrational, retarded and undocumented reason, the <a>
+element in XHTML 1.0 Strict does not have the "target" element, so
+instead I have to use XHTML 1.0 Transitional. Well, great. If you
+enjoy reading TOTALLY unhelpful answers, try
+ http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/2004/xhtml-faq#target
+which says:
+
+ Why was the target attribute removed from XHTML 1.1?
+
+ It wasn't. XHTML 1.0 comes in three versions: strict,
+ transitional, and frameset. All three of these were
+ deliberately kept as close as possible to HTML 4.01 as
+ XML would allow. XHTML 1.1 is an updated version of
+ XHTML 1.0 strict, and no version of HTML strict has
+ ever included the target attribute. The other two
+ versions, transitional and frameset, were not updated,
+ because there was nothing to update. If you want to
+ use the target attribute, use XHTML 1.0 transitional.
+
+And, yes, this is the ONLY mention of "target" in the W3C's FAQ.
+
+If you want slightly more information, a thread at
+ http://www.thescripts.com/forum/thread96361.html
+asks and answers the question:
+
+ If this attribute is indeed deprecated, which seems to
+ be the case, is there an alternative to
+ target="_blank" to open hyperlinks in a new/blank
+ window?
+
+ Not that I know of, other than using javascript.
+
+Nice one, W3C! Way to improve cross-browser portability!
+</%doc>