FW: [motm] RE: web designerYes, but the purist will note that creating the binary file by manually entering the data as simply "1s" or "0s" is the only way to go. The first web designers worked for AT&T and produced the entire web in paper form. All design was done on yellow paper with only 1 bit resolution - black on, or black off. Of course, these early web designers were not without controversary. The "yellow pages," as these early web designs were commonly called, soon baloonned into 2 bits of resolution to accomodate the addition of red script in the code. To handle the stress of the additional coding, an old Karate instructor was hired who illustrated the new technique with artfull right hand strokes for "black on, black off," and left hand motions for "red-on, red off." Not only did the new technique greatly increase early web designers understading of the 2-bit designs, but all of them by default became proficient in self defense. Few people know that this is how "nerds" became elevated to the status of "geek" and invented computers to get back at all the "jocks" that would never be able to understand them. Larry Hendry my first personal computer had a tape drive and 16K of memory ----- Original Message ----- From: Tkacs, Ken I'm still one of those old curmudgeons that code everything in Notepad. I just wrote a massive SQL Server-backed web application without touching InterDev or anything like it. There isn't one letter in that code that I didn't put there intentionally. Drag & drop tools are for the young & lazy. <b,bg> -----Original Message----- >>>>>> Ya know Paul, you should join the 21st century. Typing HTML by hand is SO 90's. You should be typing XML (MUCH simpler and less error prone), and transforming each page using an XSLT stylesheet that only had to be written once, no matter how many pages of modules you add (that's my day job).
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Re: [motm] RE: web designer
2002-07-22 by J. Larry Hendry
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