The automatic listprocessor doesn't respond to commands. It's
impossible to find out which person is responsible for the
mailing list operation. I've sent a problem report to
[email protected], but got no response. Maybe that site have
some major problems, of which the html-wg list is one of the
less important?
The last message I got from the list is this:
> Received: from fssun09-21.dev.oclc.org by othello.admin.kth.se (5.65+bind 1.8+ida 1.4.2/4.0b)
> id AA13059; Mon, 13 Nov 95 19:12:55 +0100
> Return-Path: <[email protected]>
> Received: from (localhost.dev.oclc.org) by fssun09.dev.oclc.org (4.1/SMI-4.1)
> id AA15561; Mon, 13 Nov 95 12:19:13 EST
> Date: Mon, 13 Nov 95 12:19:13 EST
> Message-Id: <[email protected]>
> Reply-To: [email protected]
> Originator: [email protected]
> Sender: [email protected]
> Precedence: bulk
> From: [email protected] (Mike Meyer)
> To: Multiple recipients of list <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: What about
> X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0c -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas
> X-Comment: HTML Working Group
> Status: R
>
> > There is a fair amount of typographical evidence that relatively short
> > lines (as you get in a multi-column layout) are more readable than
> > full-page-width lines.
>
> So what happens when your two-column layout is viewed by a browser
> that's been configured for lines with a comfortable reading length
> (say, 50 characters or so)? To short lines are no better than to long
> lines, and tend to be ugly if a few long words show up in the text.
>
> Nothing prevents a browser from formatting HTML 2.0 with two columns
> now, and there are certainly tools that can print HTML in a two-column
> format. However, forcing two columns when you don't know the
> characteristic of the display device seems like a bad idea.
>
> Style sheets provide room for attaching conditions to going to two
> columns of text. Being able to set limits on the conditions under
> which you try and do two columns means you're not going to wind up
> producing an unreadable layout on devices that are outside that limit.
>
> <mike
/Olle
--
Olle Jarnefors, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm <[email protected]>