On Thu, 11 May 2000 15:04:48 EDT, Scot Mc Pherson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  said:
>       The necessity to send e-mail in html is NOT. Regardless of whether a list
> or commerce wishes to advertise through e-mail, there are already avenues
> for distributing material to demographically selected individuals. Its
> called the WWW and creating hypertext links in an e-mail to direct a user to
> desired content is certainly MORE than enough, and also solves part of the
> congestion problem, because the user must take the time to visit the site in
> question as opposed the site making a visit to each and every recipient of
> the message, whether they care about this week's issue of the newsletter or
> not.

Strictly speaking, part 1:  E-mail as a while is not a necessity.  The US
Postal Service has a 200 year record of delivering large amounts of material
in a reasonably cost-effective manner.

Strictly speaking, part 2:  A case could be made that there should *NOT* be
hypertext links in a text/plain segment of an E-mail.  RFC2046, section 4.1.3
says pretty specifically:

4.1.3.  Plain Subtype

   The simplest and most important subtype of "text" is "plain".  This
   indicates plain text that does not contain any formatting commands or
   directives. Plain text is intended to be displayed "as-is", that is,

OK? Got that?  In other words, it's *PLAIN* text.  You want hyperlinks,
use text/html or some other type that is defined to support them....

(Yes, I *know* people violate this all the time.  Doesn't mean we should
encourage it *more* just because we don't like text/html....)

-- 
                                Valdis Kletnieks
                                Operating Systems Analyst
                                Virginia Tech


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