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- Date: Sat, 2 Jan 1993 10:11:00 CST
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- From: Jim Milles <MILLESJG@SLUVCA.SLU.EDU>
- Subject: Looking Back from 12/31/92
- Lines: 347
-
- ------------------------- Original message follows -------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 92 20:32:30 CST
- From: "Michael S. Hart" <HART@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu>
-
-
- Comments from December 31, 1991 About Ideas From the Past
-
-
- Contents
-
- **Form Versus Content. . .The Eternal Battle is Finally Ending**
-
- **"Drinking from a Firehose". . .I Dare You to Say that Again!**
-
- **Easy Storage Versus Easy Access. . .Compression Versus ASCII**
- "Send Them the Sourcecode". . .I Dare You, Too, Say that Again!*
-
- **Moderators Should be Moderate. . .Should They Not?
- "This Will Be the Last Posting on the Subject"
-
- Part 1
- **Form Versus Content. . .The Eternal Battle is Finally Ending**
-
- Margination. . .Form Versus Content. . .We Have a New Winner and
- the Winner is. . . . . . . . .the reader!
-
- Can we really stay with incompatible forms of Desktop Publishing
- programs that require expensive computers to see or print them??
- In the short run we will stay with Plain Vanilla ASCII for email
- and other things that must read a wide audience, but for narrow,
- narrower, narrowest communications there may be an advantage for
- using media other people won't be willing or able to read.
-
- Paper printing has spent an inordinate amount of time and energy
- on preparing manuscripts for publication in the matter of form a
- page takes and on margins for those pages.
-
- The amount of time and energy has been SO great that we take for
- granted most of what we see on the printed page, except perhaps,
- when it become ridiculously obvious in newspaper columns when it
- happens that one line has twice as many letters as the following
- line. . .a n d t h e p r i n t e r s a d d a s p a c e t o
- each position in the line to justify the margination once more--
- just as other professions go out of their way to justify similar
- idiosyncracies of their own.
-
- However, with electronic text there is no need for pages at all,
- and using varied margins does not cost paper, the expense of the
- paper is the idiosyncratic cause of the thousands of hyphens all
- over the average book. You are probably so used to it that your
- mind skips over it, but take a look and you will find the margin
- is justified at the expense of 10% of the lines being hyphenated
- to accommodate the saving of perhaps 1 or 2% of the paper (If an
- example page had 50 lines and it would cost an entire line. . .a
- not terribly great prospect. . .then the book would be 2% longer
- in pages to eliminate all the extra hyphenation; if the page for
- the example contained 100 lines, then 1% more pages would do it.
-
- Just as there is no need for pagination with scrolls or with the
- electronic equivalent, so, too, there is no need for margination
- . . .as the number of characters is the same to contain articles
- with an average of 65 characters. . .whether the margins are all
- the same, such as in this article, or whether half the lines are
- 75 characters and the other half are 55 characters, and none are
- actually 65 characters.
-
- For those of you who have wondered about my margination, I would
- be easily willing to tell you half the reason for it. . .I would
- write on early word processors that justified the margins with a
- method similar to the newspaper example above, by the insertions
- of spaces between words to create the justification. You can do
- this still with most word processors today, but at least most of
- them will insert the spaces where you can see them (WYSIWYG. . .
- What You See Is What You Get). . .but. . .there were no WYSIWYGs
- back then, so I learned to write in manners that Let Me See What
- I Was Going To Get. . .as I wanted to determine the phraseology,
- not have the computer do it for me.
-
- As far as _I_ am concerned, Desktop Publishing has focused quite
- enough on fonts, form, margination, proportional spacing and the
- antiquated 8 1/2 by 11 inch format. . .so much, in fact, that an
- electronic text from Desktop Publishing output is so messy in an
- Etext of the Plain Vanilla ASCII that it is often pretty useless
- unless presented in the Desktop Publishing program.
-
- The second reason has to do with the 81 pages of rules about the
- FORM of my thesis, including margination right to left, top from
- bottom, and much, much, much more.
-
- At any rate, electronic texts will eliminate the needs for pages
- and margins to be regulated. . .although people will continue to
- regulate them for years to come, and programs will allow authors
- of theses and other works to write while thinking only about the
- CONTENT of what they write, and then translate it into the FORMs
- required by this officialdom or that one with ease. In the past
- it used to be a major requirement that the authors spend totally
- inordinate amounts of time or money. . .or both. . .on "Payments
- of Dues" proving they were really interested enough in admission
- to the cliques of those who had already done so.
-
- Why is form prevalent over content? Because those power people,
- who earned their power the old-fashioned way, are afraid the new
- people will outstrip them with less effort, since the new people
- have new tools. Some professors of Shakespeare don't like their
- new students being able to look up "To be or not to be," seconds
- after typing it into a computer search program. . .while another
- type of Shakespeare professor sees this as a way of furthering a
- limited access to their favorite author to an unlimited access--
- and to an unlimited audience.
-
- The difference is that some professors are true teachers in true
- fashion as was Geoffrey Chaucer's "Oxford Scholar," who was said
- to be the kind of man who "would gladly learn and gladly teach,"
- ("And gladly wolde he lerne, and gladly teche," the exact quote)
- while other professors have a different philosophy that has been
- described as that of "A Cat Guarding the Cream" (Huber, 1992).
-
- At any rate, you may notice that some of the etext I have edited
- for Project Gutenberg have a minimal number of hyphens and also,
- widows and orphans have been minimized in pagination/margination
- and also in phraseology. . .i.e. many more of our lines end with
- the end of a sentence, a comma, etc., and rarely begin with only
- one word from the previous line.
-
- Thus begins the end of the tyranny of FORM OVER CONTENT as it is
- practiced today in the art of publishing.
-
- Part 2
- ***Drinking from a Firehose. . .I Dare You to Say that Again!***
-
- One of the more famous anti-computer/anti-networking quotations,
- which has been denied by most or all of those to whom is has had
- the unfortunate experience of being attributed to.
-
- This would be analogous to stating that having a library in your
- reach was forcing all the information in that library at you. I
- submit that the statement that using computers or networks would
- be analogous to "drinking from a firehose" is totally silly, and
- needs little or no refutation. Unless you are one of those whom
- were tricked into trying to read the whole Freshman Reading List
- . . .then you are in little danger of trying to drink in all the
- information available on the nets.
-
- The fact that a great deal of the information you may want is to
- be found on the nets, without you having to get out of your seat
- to get it, without you having to write it down to quote it, only
- signifies ACCESS to that information. . .not that an information
- supply is being forced down your throat.
-
- Part 3
- **Easy Storage Versus Easy Access. . .Compression Versus ASCII**
-
- Another of the silliest statements cruising the nets right now--
- Let Those Who Can't UnZip on their Machines Have the Sourcecode.
-
- Now, verily, I say unto you: the odds of a person who cannot do
- an unzip being able to recompile sourcecode for a machine that a
- system administrator has not already provided zip and unzip for;
- very, very long odds indeed.
-
- Perhaps. . .just perhaps. . .half the people I speak to around a
- country that has more computers and more networkers than others;
- perhaps half of them can get a zip file and unzip it. When this
- is brought up in network conversations about experts vs. novices
- someone invariably says "Give them the sourcecode. . .its free."
-
- Probably only about 1% of the people on the nets are programmers
- who could make heads or tails of (trans)porting sourcecodes from
- one piece of hardware to another. These people probably already
- know more then enough about zipping and unzipping, arcing/zooing
- /booing/arjing/lzhing, and all the other ways of compression.
-
- Of the people who don't know how to unzip, not even 1% should be
- expected to know what to do with even the best commented code on
- the nets. This is infinitely worse than saying "Let them eat of
- the Imperial Cake," and the authors of those statements would be
- suitable candidates for retractions, apologies or should have to
- "Eat Hot Electrons" spat at them from the masses.
-
- (Sorry. . .Flame off)
-
- The fact is the compressed files have driven Plain Vanilla ASCII
- files off the nets to such an extent that even the sophisticated
- Archie -s alice search is not likely to find you an uncompressed
- copy of Alice in Wonderland: one of the most widely distributed
- etexts in the world.
-
- This is ostensibly to allow more to be done with less. . .in the
- specific case here. . .to allow more files to be stored on disks
- . . .and fewer packets to be sent on the nets.
-
- However, the amount of time spent to unzip the average file is a
- large enough amount of time to defeat the time saved for average
- persons sending and receiving average files. Most files are too
- short to take much advantage of compression. However, as modems
- and other hardware continue to incorporate compression modes for
- users with the "invisible" program, then the users without unzip
- can get the zipped files without ever knowing it.
-
- The fact that drives cost half of what they did two years ago is
- not making Plain Vanilla Files more accessible. Of course, when
- supersets of ASCII, such as Unicode or whatever, add another bit
- or even another 8 bits to each character, two things will happen
- . . .one is that anyone using this code will have to use more of
- their space to store the same etext files. If we adopt a 16 bit
- code, then a one megabyte file will take two megabytes. . .and a
- compression scheme will undoubtedly be created to reduce 16 bits
- of information back to 8 bits when there are none of the oddball
- new codes being used, and then the 8 bits can be compressed back
- to what is today a somewhat normal .zip file, although half seem
- not to know what to do with a .zip file even now.
-
- Part 4
- **Moderators Should be Moderate. . .Should They Not?
-
- Several things have happened in 1992 that should be reflected on
- in terms of moderation besides the epidemic of .zip files taking
- .txt files out of the main stream where mainstream people cannot
- find them any longer.
-
- One is the famous "This Will Be the Last Posting on the Subject"
- notice posted by users and moderators alike.
-
- I am afraid I was forced to correct an assumption by some users,
- when I received notes advising me that some other users had said
- "This Will Be the Last Posting on the Subject" a few times. The
- questioners in question thought the moderators should not post a
- message like that. . .and I was a little ashamed to have to tell
- them that the people in question WERE the moderators. . .who are
- probably going to have to learn to be a little more moderate.
-
- I have been putting off telling this story for a while, and will
- only tell it in barest detail now, but it illustrates one of the
- biggest reasons why PLATO/NovaNet did not grow as people thought
- it should have, and why Bitnet and Internet are the largest.
-
- Back in the old days. . .discussion groups were actually "owned"
- by certain people. . .who in some/many cases actually PAID money
- to buy the computer space to put them up. . .often times for the
- sheer ego of being "the authority" on a subject. I must confess
- for the record, that when I was a BBS Sysop back in the mid 80's
- I had a few users who thought I was a little to hard on them.
-
- At any rate, one of the major discussion groups was "owned" by a
- person who apparently went way out of his way to insure that the
- IBM PC he bought was "the first" in his locale, and apparently a
- desire to be the "Peter Norton" of PLATO was involved, too.
-
- The story begins when I discovered a "bug" in the latest version
- of DOS five or ten years ago (I am being intentionally vague and
- not naming the discussion group or the person, as I also have in
- the rest of the cases I respond to on the nets, ever since I was
- thoroughly "roasted" on one discussion group for refuting what a
- person said there. Even though I was correct, and no one said I
- wasn't correct in the substantive matter of my refutation, I was
- told repeatedly that I should not directly answer or refute note
- postings that I thought were inaccurate. . .as I used to just do
- a repost of the original note to insure accurate quotation, then
- add my own comments. This effort to let the people I argue with
- remain nameless is an experiment. It may not continue--advice?)
-
- OK. . .so I created a "bugfix" and posted it on this discussion.
- After a few weeks I was asked to post it again, so I sent a note
- to the "owner" of this group about it, and asked that if it were
- OK to repost it, would he get it out of the archives and repost.
- His note to the person who requested it was to get it from those
- archives, and his note to me was that I could repost it, but the
- effort to do so had to come from me, not him. I couldn't locate
- it in the archives but I am the kind of person who keeps a copy,
- so I reposted it. (The note telling people to look it up in the
- archives was publicly posted, several times, as you will see.)
-
- After a few more weeks more requests showed up to repost the fix
- and this time it was easy, as I had kept the file on hand. This
- seemed to keep everyone happy for quite a while and no one asked
- again for quite a while, but each time the requests were posted,
- the "owner" told them to look in the archives, which was hard in
- those days, and might still be for all I know, but I just posted
- the fix over and over, since no one seemed to be too good with a
- search of the archives.
-
- Now for the big climax. . .eventually the "owner" got the DOS to
- use, ran into the bug, and posted another question about it. In
- any other case, I would just have posted the fix again, but this
- time I decided to look for it in the archives, and if I found it
- I was going to tell the "owner" to look for it in the archives.
-
- I must confess that I had several other run-ins with the "owner"
- and had defended several users from him in the past, telling him
- and the entire list that I thought he was being too hard on some
- of the users, who were asking very normal questions, but ones he
- was tired of. . .much as many people today are tired of seeing a
- new user ask about .zip files.
-
- At any rate, I spent the entire afternoon in the archive files--
- and could not find the note from the subject headers. However I
- had an advantage, I had the original note, so I found the date--
- which made it much easier to find the original note, which I did
- by date, even though I couldn't find it by title.
-
- Then. . .I dug up one of the notes posted by the "owner" and put
- it up as a response to his query. . .telling him to "look in the
- archives" in his own words. (If anyone should know his way thru
- the archives easily, it should have been he, and I had spent the
- time to prove the note was there before telling him.)
-
- After a very short, and very fierce flame war (well, they didn't
- call them "flames" back then, in which I did not take part other
- than to say I was defending the "users' rights" and that "owner"
- should not refuse considerations to the "users" that the "owner"
- would want in return) I was "defenestrated" (tossed out). To my
- amazement, many of the users stood up for me, but the "owner" in
- question would not reinstate me year after year after year. The
- remarkable coincidence is that on the day I composed this, I ran
- into him after not seeing him for years, and asked him once more
- to reinstate me, and found out the he had somehow come to be not
- involved any more. (I also got his permission to tell this, but
- I still don't believe [these days] in naming someone in my notes
- of this kind. . .so. . .if you know who it was, please don't say
- who it was.)
-
- The point of all this is that the Internet and Bitnet groups are
- much more growth oriented because of their openness and will not
- be outpaced by overly moderated forums on other systems and that
- I VERY MUCH APPRECIATE THE DIFFERENCE. Moving from PLATO to the
- Internet and Bitnet five or six years ago made a huge difference
- in how I viewed the networks, and that even though I may appear,
- in some eyes, to still be pushing the limits, I must admit, in a
- public manner, how much I appreciate you all, including those to
- whom I have sent even the nastiest private replies.
-
- So much for the past, but I like the direction we have come. . .
- and tomorrow, in 1993, I will write something about the future--
-
-
- Happy New Year!
-
- =====================================================
-
- Thank you for your interest,
-
- Michael S. Hart, Professor of Electronic Text
- Executive Director of Project Gutenberg Etext
- Illinois Benedictine College, Lisle, IL 60532
- No official connection to U of Illinois--UIUC
- hart @uiucvmd.bitnet or hart@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu
-