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Grant Mongardi wrote: | I thought you folks might enjoy this rant. This guy's a good friend, but | I constantly give him a hard time about his M$-centric lifestyle, and he | will do the same to me for my *NIX-centric leanings. He's a very bright | Windows admin, and we give each other jabs on a regular basis. But this | particular one was alot of fun. ... | Sheep. That's what you are. When was the last time you used software | that wasn't tied to some sort of proprietary format? Would you buy a car | that could only run on gasoline that the manufacturer provided? And in | two years when they say support for your car's gasoline is EOL, would | you be dumb enough to buy another one? | | You could read it, couldn't you? It didn't hurt your eyes, did it? It | wasn't friggen blinking, scrolling, or otherwise containing some sort of | annoying 'feature' that the manufacturer thought was a proper way to | display text. It's TEXT. I'm sending you TEXT! No images, no colors, no | embedded music. It's JUST TEXT. HTML is for web pages and sales guys. If | I want to convey a message, I can do it with just words. | | Did I convey my ideas effectively in this message? Yeah, and I've heard/read some very similar comments from a number of professional journalists. Their attitude tends to be "I write news articles, which consist of words arranged into sentences. It's the job of the editors and layout guys to make it look pretty on the page or screen or whatever. I don't need to be distracted by the fancy features like fonts or colors that word processors try to foist on me, and I've been bitten too many times by my text coming out garbled because the recipient has different release of the software than mine. I don't do pictures; that's the photographers' job. So I use a plain-text editor. It doesn't matter which one; what matters is that it delivers the words, punctuation, etc., just as I typed them, and nothing else. The recipients can and will feed my text to formatters, since that's their job. My job is to supply the words explaining the news story." OTOH, I've read a few comments about the New York Times teaching some very basic HTML to their journalists. They say this has worked out well. The journalists are very conservative with their markup, and when they us it, they almost always get it right. The editors save some time, and they can often send the text right to the layout folks. They're apparently happier with this than with the grief of trying to word-processor docs degarbled and converted correctly to all their output formats. And they say they get a lot of comments that their stories are more readable (on whatever screen the readers are using) than the stories from most other news sources. They consider this the result of avoiding word processing software, and using mostly hand-typed HTML. But they've gotta be under pressure to make their stuff a lot flashier. The marketers usually love flash (in both uses of the term). Younger hires are probably used to word processors, and will resist learning a "primitive" text editor. We'll see. I just checked nytimes.com, and the front page does have two slightly annoying changing pieces. There's an obvious flash ad on the right, plus "Readers' opinions" quote in the middle that changes every few seconds (and can't be selected with the mouse). Aside from that, there's no distracting moving images to interfere with reading the text. It may be that they've managed to learn something from the move to the new world of electronic news distribution. -- There are three kinds of people in this world, those who count and those who don't.
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