On Thu, 22 Jun 2006 09:36:15 +0000 "Lynn Kilroy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I use MSN Hotmail. Seems MSN Hotmail doesn't work quite the same way your > cludgy e-mail clients {oft mentioned in your article} do. I've never liked web-based email. Enough said. :) > Furthermore, most common users {people who use MSN Hotmail} don't bottom > post because MSN Hotmail {and Yahoo! for that matter} both are setup for top > posting - like this one. Imagine my confusion, having used nearly nothing but 'elm' and then having to use Microsoft Mail (outlook) at work - I was of course firmly used to bottom-post, or intervening quotes and text, since my email experiences up until then were usenet & email (uucp at first). Of course, one can include RIME and similar exchanges in DOSland, but we didn't top-post there either. But at this job, everything was top post. The emailer pretty much forced you to edit that way - I recall spending time tryiing to reformat the emails to look like what I'm used to, but eventually gave up. After all, it's a different environment, and just maybe top-posting is appropriate there. But I won't get into a big debate over it :). > Last time I looked, WordPerfect went down the toilet. Mostly. It kinda half survives in Corel - but maybe that's dead too. WP (used it heavily in DOS days) was a fine product and at that time - mid 80's - may have had the best tech support of any product. Sure it seemed cumbersome to work, and the 'fancy programming languge" may have been arcane, but people used it. 1-2-3 macros were so heavily used back then too - but they resemble something looking like APL instead of a "real" programming language :). I think WP died out not because of these reasons but because their Windows product was a dog compared to the DOS version. Ease of use is one thing - and probably a very important thing, even if it means dumbing down the product. After all, many of the advanced features of Microsoft Word never get used much. And you could say (and be right) that doing this in (la)TeX gives you ul;timate power over the printed page. Hell, you could make it print every other lnie upside down if you wanted it to. ;) But I doubt that it would be prominent if sold as a "commercial word processor". > Lynn Erika Kilroy -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ David E. Fox Thanks for letting me [EMAIL PROTECTED] change magnetic patterns [EMAIL PROTECTED] on your hard disk. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]