We want to see a high level of openness and commonality between mobile and the traditional web, with enhancements to CSS to better deal with layout and limited display resources, and with enhancements to JavaScript and the DOM to improve security, particularly with respect to Mashups. Security is our greatest concern. We want to be able to reliably separate components, but then allow them to interact with each other to the extent that they want to. Mashups are the most interesting advancement in programming in decades, but the web environment is hopelessly insecure. We like the requirements of well-formedness in XHTML, but we don't like the brittleness. HTML is no longer just a document format. HTML has become an application delivery format. We want to be able to define new tags and attributes simply by specifying their CSS qualities. While we want commonality between the mobile web and the landlocked web, we don't mind seeing advancements appearing in mobile first. The traditional web has been stuck for a while. It may be time for mobile to lead the way. With this in mind, any deviations in the mobile web must look forward to useful adoption by the web as a whole. New mechanisms for offline operation must be compatible with the needs for secure mashups, and must also be applicable to PCs.