I HATE html email. It takes forever to open, and the longer the email
message the longer it takes to open. I especially detest html spam email.

So all you potential emailers out there, please don't send me html email.

TYVM.

Harry

on 09/17/2002 1:36 PM, Tony LaFemina at remacs at optonline.net wrote:

Lee Larson wrote:
On Monday, September 16, 2002, at 11:44 AM, Nelson Helm wrote:

The weekly digests I get are filled with repeats, (each e-mail containing
it's predecessors) and html code, which together makes them almost
incomprehensible.

I think daily digests are more in order. The html code is the fault of
people who use html mail when they shouldn't. (I never use styled mail when
I don't know for sure that the receiver can handle it. Plain text is
appropriate 99% of the time.)
---
Lee Larson, Mathematics Department, University of Louisville
Phone: 502.852.6826 FAX: 502.852.7132

Your reaction to this HTML thing in e-mail sounds synonymous with the movie
Pleasantville, which is currently being shown on cable. I personally think
it should be left up to the sender of the e-mail on how they want to format
it. Both Netscape and Outlook Express are free downloads and recognize both
plain text and HTML. If anyone has a mail program that can't read HTML, then
let them download one of these if they want.

I remember a while back when frames were first introduced to the internet. I
would go to some address and a page would open, declaring that if my browser
couldn't handle frames, I couldn't visit their web site. I thought that was
odd. I was under the impression that the whole idea of putting up a web site
was to get as many people to visit and see what was there. Anyway, my
reaction was "I didn't want to see your stupid web site anyway!" and went on
my way. (That's one reason why I still use simple HTML code for my web
site). I was working with frames in ClarisWorks v2 long before it was
introduced to the internet, but these people made it sound like it was a
revolutionary new concept in desktop computing.

If you're referring to those e-mails that show all the HTML coding, and you
have to read between the lines to decipher it, I think that's because the
people that sent those e-mails didn't know what they were doing. A good rule
to follow is, if you're experimenting with e-mail, send it to yourself
first.


Harry,


Harry Jacobson-Beyer
Surveyor of the Passing Scene!

http://bellsouthpwp.net/h/a/harryjb/
What a strange, long, trip it is!

remember: it's not how fast you climb the hill that matters, it's how fast
you go coming down!

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