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- Xref: sparky comp.std.internat:817 news.admin.misc:706
- Newsgroups: comp.std.internat,news.admin.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!sgiblab!sgigate!sgi!rhyolite!vjs
- From: vjs@rhyolite.wpd.sgi.com (Vernon Schryver)
- Subject: Re: 8-bit news
- Message-ID: <th0efeo@rhyolite.wpd.sgi.com>
- Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc. Mountain View, CA
- References: <Bz2298.11K@zoo.toronto.edu> <4yyNVB4w165w@blues.kk.sub.org>
- Date: Sat, 12 Dec 1992 19:27:25 GMT
- Lines: 80
-
- In article <4yyNVB4w165w@blues.kk.sub.org>, kosta@blues.kk.sub.org (Kosta Kostis) writes:
- > henry@zoo.toronto.edu (Henry Spencer) writes:
- >
- > > However, vjs's main point is correct: there is no way to mandate updates
- > > to every piece of relevant software everywhere, which means that backward
- > > compatibility is (unfortunately) fairly important.
- >
- > There is no way to mandate updates especially if there is no "need"
- > for that. As long as we don't use 8-bit, nobody will ever change
- > "faulty" software.
- >
- > > If the purpose of
- > > sending the message is to communicate, rather than to score political
- > > points, you want to be pretty sure that it's intelligible to the audience.
- >
- > It's not political, it's just sensible. :-)
- >
- > > It will not be possible to forget about the bit-handicapped until their
- > > numbers are vanishingly small. That won't happen soon.
- >
- > I don't agree. It depends on us. Since the intro of VT 2xx terminals
- > in 1983 nine years went by and many people are already equiped with
- > 8-bit terminals and PCs, Macs, NeXTs, Workstations of various brands
- > now. All these are capable of displaying 8-bit characters.
- >
- > Those who don't need 8-bit, like people who will never read/write
- > anything but english text, won't be bothered, but it would really
- > help the rest of us.
- > ...
-
-
- All of that depends on the assumption that you control both ends and
- all intermediate forwarders that might ever touch your mail. That
- assumption can be valid in a private network and sometimes among
- communities in the Internet. Those Internet communities must be either
- very tightly knit or distinctly less than modern themselves, to avoid
- having any MX records that point outside.
-
- If, because of the vicissitudes of MX records, UUCP map entries, and so
- on, your mesage happens to go to a machine running old software, then
- your message is likely to either be stripped to 7 bits or lost entirely.
-
- There are many 100,000 machines in the Internet whose users think they
- do not need 8-bit text. The users and administrators of those machines
- will actively resist changing their software only because your mail
- suffers when it passes through their machines. If your mail contains
- control characters in headers that cause sendmail on their machines to
- crash, they will blame you and the vendor, and many will still actively
- resist changing their systems. Even if you bought the machines, paid
- the salaries of the system administrators, and paid for the maintenance
- of those machines, you would find they would still resist changing, as
- the U.S. Department of Defense found during the "host table" conversion.
-
- Consider another historical example. Most people agree that "rabid
- rerouting" of email is impolite, unnecessary and just plain bad. Those
- who disagree have only some weak efficiency arguments. Rabid rerouting
- has always caused mail to be misdirected, bounced, and lost. Many
- people have complained publically and privately. Still, as far as I
- know, the big rabid rerouters are still at it, 5 or so years after the
- practice was universally condemned. The rabid rerouters include sites
- that at least once upon a time forwarded a lot of mail.
-
- What Henry wrote was literally true. "There is no way to mandate
- updates." Not in many places in the world. Certainly not in cultures
- like that of the U.S. where many people make a point of defying the
- "mandates" of those without genuine power.
-
- Waiting for all or even only most machines to be upgraded is hopeless.
- I personally wish it were otherwise, if only to stop hearing about
- problems in products that I worked on years ago. Most people just do
- not think upgrading a systems that works well enough for them is a good
- use of their time. People who to try to force them to upgrade their
- systems are either ignored or castigated. That may not be sensible or
- convenient, but it is a fact.
-
- How much European and Japanese mail still passes through the U.S. with
- its large number of recidivists?
-
-
- Vernon Schryver, vjs@sgi.com
-