diff --git a/www/history.html b/www/history.html
index f8dba78..ee5a509 100644
--- a/www/history.html
+++ b/www/history.html
@@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
     "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">

 <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">

 <head>

+  <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" value="application/xhtml+xml" />

   <meta name="verify-v1" content="g222frIIxcQTrvDR3NBRUSKP3AnMNoqxOkIniCEkV7U=" />

   <link rel="meta" type="application/rdf+xml" title="ICI" href="http://imagemagick.org/ici.rdf" />

   <style type="text/css" media="screen,projection"><!--

@@ -126,6 +127,9 @@
    <a href="http://www.hygi.de">Reinigungsmittel</a><!-- 201002000400+ -->
 </div>
 <div  class="sponsor">
+  <a href="http://www.tomsgutscheine.de">Tom's Gutscheine</a><!-- 201005010360 invendio.de-->
+</div>
+<div  class="sponsor">
   <a href="http://www.online-kredit-index.de">Kredit</a><!-- 201004010120 Buchhorn -->
 </div>
 <div  class="sponsor">
@@ -163,7 +167,7 @@
 

 <p>The next generation of ImageMagick, version 5, started when Bob Friesenhahn contacted me and suggested I improve the application programming interface so users could leverage the image-processing algorithms from other languages or scripts.  Bob also wrote a C++ wrapper for ImageMagick called Magick++, and began contributing enhancements such as the module loader facility, automatic file identification, and test suites.  In the mean-time, the project picked up a few other notable contributors: Glenn Randers-Pehrson, William Radcliffe, and Leonard Rosenthol.  By now, ImageMagick was being utilized by tens of thousands of users, who reacted gruffly when a new release broke an existing API call or script.  The other members of the group wanted to freeze the API and command line but I was not quite ready, since ImageMagick was not quite what I had envisioned it could be. Bob and the others created a fork of ImageMagick. I alone continued to develop ImageMagick.</p>

 

-<p>I did not work alone for long.  Anthony Thyssen contacted me about deficiencies in the ImageMagick command line programs.  He pointed out that the command line was confusing when dealing with more than one image. He suggested an orderly, well-defined method for dealing with the command line, and this became ImageMagick version 6 (the current release). His efforts are detailed on his web pages, <a href="http://www.imagemagick.org/Usage/" target="420950162">Examples of ImageMagick Usage</a>.  I highly recommend that you peruse his site. He has illustrated the power of ImageMagick in ways that even I did not know were possible.</p>

+<p>I did not work alone for long.  Anthony Thyssen contacted me about deficiencies in the ImageMagick command line programs.  He pointed out that the command line was confusing when dealing with more than one image. He suggested an orderly, well-defined method for dealing with the command line, and this became ImageMagick version 6 (the current release). His efforts are detailed on his web pages, <a href="http://www.imagemagick.org/Usage/" target="554206395">Examples of ImageMagick Usage</a>.  I highly recommend that you peruse his site. He has illustrated the power of ImageMagick in ways that even I did not know were possible.</p>

 

 <p>It has been 20 years since ImageMagick was first conceived, and it looks likely that it will be here for another 20 and beyond. The command line and the application programming interface are stable, but there is still work to do.  We are currently working on improving the conjure utility, Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) support, and adding better support for video formats.</p>