Ben Hood wrote:
> As much as I hate HTML mail, it is the accepted norm. Of course
> that doesn't mean I won't try and stop it.
Example from life: I'm running a mailing list for Anime
(japanese animation) fans. Luckly, most of the list members are
"advanced" so most of them dont like the idea of having hebrew fonts
and HTML mail used in the list.
Unfortunatly, we're thinking about expanding the club, which may
require moving the mailing list form to a web-forum instead, and
in a popular place where most typical people can find it. This
means, that everyone will start using hebrew. Also, the only popular
israeli web-forum site allows only IE5+ to access their site. So..
Because they all allready use only outlook and explorer, saying that
"only IE is allowed" wouldnt mean alot. And because they all got
hebrew support in their browsers, saying "hebrew will be used" wouldnt
matter alot, either. So its a lost case.
Thats life. :)