Xref: utzoo alt.sources.d:624 comp.sources.d:5568 Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!shelby!rutgers!cs.utexas.edu!wuarchive!decwrl!bacchus.pa.dec.com!deccrl!decvax.dec.com!zinn!ubbs-nh!siia!drd From: drd@siia.mv.com (David Dick) Newsgroups: alt.sources.d,comp.sources.d Subject: Re: Unnecessary tar-compress-uuencodes Message-ID: <1990Jul11.002014.5305@siia.mv.com> Date: 11 Jul 90 00:20:14 GMT References: <15652@bfmny0.BFM.COM> Organization: Software Innovations, Inc. Lines: 40 In <15652@bfmny0.BFM.COM> tneff@bfmny0.BFM.COM (Tom Neff) writes: >We have recently seen a spate of "source" postings in "uuencoded >compressed TAR" form, instead of SHAR or other traditional plain text >formats. Now, possibly in response, we are seeing tools to manipulate >this format posted. This is a bad trend! Let's not encourage it >further. > But the price for this is heavy: > [ list of significant reasons omitted ] This is the biggie! > * The format presupposes the existence of decoding tools which may > or may not be present in a given environment. Non-UNIX users who > lack some of the automated extraction facilities we take for > granted -- but who can still hand separate a few simple SHAR's into > something useful -- are left out in the cold. >These objections are not just quibbles -- they cut to the heart of the >question of what a worldwide source text network is supposed to be >about. News is not mail; news is not a BBS. The "advantages" of >condensing source postings into gibberish are not worth the drawbacks. As the net expands to encompass a larger and more diverse audience the familiarity with arcane encoding methods becomes rarified. The whole point of the original "shar" was that it only assumed a shell and a few commands which everyone on the fledgling USENET had. Even among the cognoscenti propogation of new tools and processing methods is not guaranteed; the time pressures of a job can interfere! I think making a significant change in distribution procedures for the benefit of one adjunct to USENET (BITNET), to the disadvantage of much of the rest of the net, is a bad idea. David Dick Software Innovations, Inc. [the Software Moving Company (sm)]