At 1:42 AM 7/21/95, Lucky Green wrote:
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In article <ac33f977080210043230@[205.199.118.202]>, tcmay@sensemedia.net (Timothy C. May) wrote:
Frankly, one of the great boons of my current setup is that I can completely get away from Unix tools and commands, away from my Unix shell account at Netcom, away from the arcane commands that vary from program to program, away from tin and elm and emacs...my fingers are already forgetting the emacs commands!
(Those of you like Unix, fine. I agree it is useful for many things, so I'm not trying to debate Unix vs. the world. Just giving my perspective, and apparently the perspective of the many who are adopting the Web browsers as their "operating environments," insulated from the underlying cruft.)
Is this the same T.C. May that used to argue vehemently that if it can't be displayed on a VT52, it was no good? Did a space alien take over Tim?
If you read my messages of last December, you'll see I said this on 15 December 1994: "I see two "stable attractors" for text/graphics/multimedia/etc. sent over the Net: "1. Straight text, ASCII, 80 column format. All systems can handle this, all mailers and newsreaders can handle it, it's what the Usenet is essentially based upon, and it gets the job done. It meets the needs of 95% of us for 95% of our needs. "2. The Web, for graphics, images, etc. This will be the next main stable attractor, deployed on many platforms. (I'm assuming the debate here about Netscape standards does not imply much of a fragmentation, that Mosaic, Netscape, MacWeb, etc., will all basically be able to display Web pages in much the same way.)" I'd say this is very consistent with what I've been saying recently. --Tim May .......................................................................... Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@sensemedia.net | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero 408-728-0152 | knowledge, reputations, information markets, Corralitos, CA | black markets, collapse of governments. Higher Power: 2^756839 | Public Key: PGP and MailSafe available. "National borders are just speed bumps on the information superhighway."