Archive of UserLand's first discussion group, started October 5, 1998.
You've never owned the look and feel ...
Author: Rogers Cadenhead Posted: 9/28/1999; 9:37:43 AM Topic: Windows apps on Linux: the real reason Msg #: 11528 (In response to 11484) Prev/Next: 11527 / 11529
< You don't have the control over the look and feel of your Web site. You never have. HTML was tailor-made for rendering tools that strip out page elements and formatting that the user doesn't want to see, then present the rest in a different form.There's a button in the current version of Opera that acts like a wayback machine -- it makes your page look like everything on the Web circa 1994, inhibiting the graphical backgrounds and fancy font choices that justify a Web designer's salary but often render a page completely unreadable.
If they ever become fully implemented, Cascading Style Sheets give users even more control to override the presentation decisions you have made on a Web site.
The arguments used against Third Voice could be used against browsers that can override font and color formatting on a Web page. Web publishers don't own the manner in which their sites are presented to a user, and I think we would lose something considerable if the courts gave them this ownership now.
There are responses to this message:
- Re: You've never owned the look and feel ..., Tucker Goodrich, 9/28/1999; 11:56:58 AM
- Re: You've never owned the look and feel ..., cameron@camworld.com, 9/28/1999; 3:44:46 PM
- Re: You've never owned the look and feel ..., Jeremy Bowers, 9/28/1999; 6:30:46 PM
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