- From: Mary Morris <marym@Finesse.COM>
- Date: Wed, 5 Feb 1997 12:04:22 -0800
- To: www-style@w3.org, bosak@atlantic-83.Eng.Sun.COM
> I will not attempt to prove, but will for the moment merely assert, > that ten years from now the total number of pages on the Web posted by > commercial content providers will be much larger than the number of > pages posted by individuals. Whether I'm right about that or not, > that's the problem space in which I'm working. The kinds of > publishing problems that I alluded to earlier arise from this area. > CSS cannot effectively address these problems; DSSSL can. That's why > I'm interested in it. I'll agree with what Jon is saying to a certain extent. However, I'm inclined to think that I might have a different version of what "commercial" means. I won't deny that ten years ago when DTP arrived on the scene, there were a lot of ransom notes created. People eventually knuckled down and did some good design work. However, DTP as evidenced by the Society for Technical Communications is still something done primarily as outsourced or contracted work by those below the Fortune 1000 class. With the rise of employment in small businesses and business successes in general, ten years from now the Fortune 1000 will probably only comprise 1/3 of the commercial web work. For that reason, I think that we would need to look at how these commercial workers will determine what to use 10 years from now. If they get good principle based education we can expect them to be open to this mindset. However, if education continues as it is today, with virtually all education being rote procedure based training on how to accomplish a particular goal such as making lists - not how to strategize a documentation design, implementation and publishing process, DSSSL will be much like DocBook. One of the things that I am constantly reminded of when I teach HTML, (and now CSS) courses, it the absolute lack of architecture, design strategy, and even general document principles taught to the average writer or DTP person these days. Mary E. S. Morris
Received on Wednesday, 5 February 1997 15:03:31 UTC