- From: Marc Salomon <marc@pele.ckm.ucsf.edu>
- Date: Sat, 29 Jun 1996 19:06:51 -0700
- To: html-erb@w3.org, www-html@w3.org, www-style@w3.org
Some historical perspective in earlier "new" technologies might be helpful here. Back in the 1940's when it first became accessible by the masses, color photography was a novelty and very expensive, so it was reserved to document the most important life events. But back then the fixing process wasn't quite perfected and people noticed that the quality of their pricy investment was degrading rather quickly for a medium that carried archival pretentions. In many American towns, color photographers and photofinishers went out of business en-masse 5-10 years after they began because people wouldn't trust someone with archival responsibility of important information who had steered them wrong with new technology once before. An interesting parallel to the current situation, many of these photographers managed to get their logo on all their client's documents. This managed to establish sole responsibility for the earlier choice to preserve their customers' life moments in an ill thought out application of new technology and reinforcing customers' decisions to take their business elsewhere in the future. In any case, its a pleasant shock to see Microsoft truly constructively involved in the standards process. Never thought I'd see the day. Let's hope they keep it up. -marc
Received on Saturday, 29 June 1996 22:11:49 UTC