Re: HTML spec
hoesel@chem.rug.nl (frans van hoesel)
From: hoesel@chem.rug.nl (frans van hoesel)
Message-id: <9306161910.AA01720@Xtreme>
Subject: Re: HTML spec
To: marca@ncsa.uiuc.edu (Marc Andreessen)
Date: Wed, 16 Jun 1993 21:10:28 +0100 (MDT)
Cc: www-talk@nxoc01.cern.ch
In-reply-to: <9306161853.AA22567@wintermute.ncsa.uiuc.edu> from "Marc Andreessen" at Jun 16, 93 01:53:08 pm
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Marc writes:
>
> 99.99% of the people I talk to want to put rich documents online,
> want control over what it looks like,
> and don't give a damn about semantic markup or distinctions between
> document structure and appearance AT ALL; the other 0.01% are still
> grappling with this whole keyboard-monitor-mouse concept.)
You are very right about that !. HTML as it is now is simple to learn.
In fact I learned by simply starting (and finished with the vatican
exhibit). There were some things that I would like to control, and are
not (yet?) possible, and some never will be, but I liked it already
as it is.
Ofcourse it took some time to find out the nice tricks. for example
to have the editor replace all CRCR pairs with a CR<p>CR but at the
point I did the last page, it went all very easy.
- frans
O, the points that were missing at that time, which I would have liked
text running around the picture, pre formatted text in a nice font,
and a mouse position depended selection inside an image
(yes I know we have now ISMAP, and I don't like it at all, because it
depends so much on the server: I cannot simply setup a document that
works this way, without storing this document on a very special server...
I want to make a document, that should contain the relevant info, not
the server!)
but the net result is still pretty good.
Now if there only were a program that color quantifies a page of images to
use not more than say 150 colors, but each image itself not more than 50...
I guess the wish list never ends, and that's what we are all avraid off.