At 09:28 PM 4/1/98 -0500, Woodrick, Ed wrote:

>     Why do yall go through so much trouble to not utilize existing
>Internet messaging standards?

I filter out HTML messages for two simple reasons:  They make digest
versions of my lists unreadable to many s*bscribers, and they increase the
size of messages with no increase in value.  

Value is the key point.  If HTML would actually make the average message
more readable, or clearer, or do ANYTHING except consume extra bandwidth
(and make me squint because of your poor choice of font), then I could see
the value of it.  I have yet to see a message that actually benefitted from
being in HTML.  

In fact, let's look at YOUR message, Mr. Woodrick.  Is there anything there
that couldn't have been sent as plain text?  Is there anything there that
was enhanced by being in HTML?  From the looks of it, the HTML tags in your
message were entirely redundant.  For that, the Internet should waste
additional bandwidth?  If some MTA's at least had the intelligence to shut
off HTML formatting when the user hasn't employed ANY font changes, bold
text, italics, or whatever -- then maybe I'd see it differently.

Until I see evidence that HTML formatting in mailing list messages has some
benefits that outweigh the disadvantages, I will continue to filter them
out.  

Interestingly, most of my s*bscribers who get bitten by my HTML filters are
thankful when I point out the problem.  As soon as they turn the HTML
"feature" off, it seems some of them like the fact that their messages trot
through their modems a little more quickly once all those pointless tags
are removed.

Dave Voorhis
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.armchair.mb.ca/~dave

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