Woops forgot to reply to all so it went to the list :P

I think your post here:

https://lists.secondlife.com/pipermail/opensource-dev/2010-September/003167.html

Was a very good one explaining what the advantages could be. A true
xml format like that would be easy to read and easy to parse. Of
course its not a line by line conversation like you read in the viewer
but it is in an order and all information would be provided in an easy
to read format provided the viewer exports the xml with proper line
endings and tab spacing :P

Did a jira ever get posted about that?

On Fri, Oct 15, 2010 at 8:32 PM, Ricky <kf6...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'd have to say that future proof and archival safe are two separate
> qualities.  Logs might need to be archived, but 90% (guessing) of the
> content is fluff only useful for a couple of months to a year at the
> most.  However, the tools that read them (such as converters /
> archivers) have a much longer lifespan.  If you do want 50+ year
> archival quality, then use a trivial exporter to convert to the ASCII
> format of your choice when you run your archival process and send it
> to paper punch tape.  (I'm not being insulting here: paper punch tape
> is THE most long-lived digital format I've ever met.)
>
> As to the stylesheet: I propose that it be installed with the viewer
> and be located in the same folder as the logs.  This way it can be
> archived along with the files by your favorite archival/storage tools.
>
> And viewing the file is likewise not an issue.  Every modern computer
> already has a browser installed and in use.  And if you still needed
> to read the log from a GUI-less computer, the logs are still ASCII.
> The tags surrounding the data are just helpful to the computer.  This
> isn't a binary format we are discussing; it's a formatted text file.
> Formatted in a way that makes it easier for a computer to read while
> still being useful to the humans involved.
>
> On Fri, Oct 15, 2010 at 5:11 PM, Jamey Fletcher <ja...@beau.org> wrote:
>> Marc Adored wrote:
>>
>>> Download a stylesheet? The file would contain a link directly to the
>>> stylesheet and would be automatically loaded. Also I'm not sure about
>>> your operating system but I'm pretty sure the file extension already
>>> opens in your default browser and once the stylesheet is specified it
>>> will look just like a plain text log file just loaded in your browser
>>> through the same process and opening a text file. The only fear here
>>> is change and the unknown. It's not going to be any harder to read the
>>> logs just different. Sorry like Ricky said its more future proof and
>>> thats all there is too it the only mistake was not setting this up
>>> earlier so the change didn't frighten so many people
>>
>> Let's see...  Future Proof.
>>
>> Program to read and process a text file - anywhere from a few hundred
>> bytes, to a small OS-wannabe like emacs.  Program to process LLSD and
>> display it - several hundred K minimum, oh, and *REQUIRED* network
>> connection live so the referenced DTD can be retrieved - more like a
>> program that is ALREADY being considered an OS-replacement, such as
>> Internet Explorer, Mozilla, Safari, or Chrome, each several dozen megabytes.
>>
>> Ok, so let's look at a project that's *GOT* a nice long history already
>> (some 30+ years) and is *VERY* interested in future-proofing.  Minor
>> project, really, called Project Gutenberg.  Here's what *they* have to
>> say on the subject:
>> http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Gutenberg:General_FAQ#G.17._Why_is_Project_Gutenberg_so_set_on_using_Plain_Vanilla_ASCII.3F
>>
>> When you really, really, *REALLY* want it to be readable - ASCII
>> plaintext is the way to go.
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