home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Collection of Internet
/
Collection of Internet.iso
/
infosrvr
/
dev
/
www_talk.930
/
000439_marca@wintermu….ncsa.uiuc.edu _Sat Dec 5 00:44:38 1992.msg
< prev
next >
Wrap
Internet Message Format
|
1994-01-24
|
1KB
Return-Path: <marca@wintermute.ncsa.uiuc.edu>
Received: from dxmint.cern.ch by nxoc01.cern.ch (NeXT-1.0 (From Sendmail 5.52)/NeXT-2.0)
id AA00147; Sat, 5 Dec 92 00:44:38 MET
Received: by dxmint.cern.ch (5.65/DEC-Ultrix/4.3)
id AA09862; Sat, 5 Dec 1992 00:57:52 +0100
Received: from wintermute.ncsa.uiuc.edu by newton.ncsa.uiuc.edu with SMTP id AA10492
(5.65a/IDA-1.4.2 for www-talk@nxoc01.cern.ch); Fri, 4 Dec 92 17:57:51 -0600
Received: by wintermute.ncsa.uiuc.edu (920110.SGI/911001.SGI)
for @newton.ncsa.uiuc.edu:www-talk@nxoc01.cern.ch id AA01046; Fri, 4 Dec 92 17:59:05 -0800
Date: Fri, 4 Dec 92 17:59:05 -0800
From: marca@ncsa.uiuc.edu (Marc Andreessen)
Message-Id: <9212050159.AA01046@wintermute.ncsa.uiuc.edu>
To: www-talk@nxoc01.cern.ch
Cc: marca@ncsa.uiuc.edu
Subject: last-modified document info?
Would it be a good, bad, or indifferent idea to allow clients to take
advantage of last-modified dates for documents when such information
exists and the document server can provide it? Specifically, should
httpd be able to provide this information somehow, and/or should
last-modified become an optional field in the header of an HTML
document?
Just random thoughts, based on the assumption that it sure would be
nice to be able to tell that document A was last modified in 1973...
Marc
--
Marc Andreessen
Software Development Group
National Center for Supercomputing Applications
marca@ncsa.uiuc.edu