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The Dullness of Social Bookmarks

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Not all that long ago, in the olden days someone began rules for email etiquette. Someone else renamed the rules Netiquette. One of the old rules was for email signatures - the few lines of text at the end of the emails you send out. Email signatures used to include links, favourite quotes and even ASCII art.

The netiquette rule was that an email signature should be 4 or 5 lines or less. As an ASCII artist who loved having my own art in my email sig, this was tough, but do-able. I miss seeing the old fashioned email sigs. They were replaced with fancier, bandwidth sucking HTML signatures and now they seem to be replaced (in a way) with social bookmarking which comes at the end of a blog post.

Someone has set the netiquette rule for that too. It’s a limit of five, someone says. It made me feel sentimental for the old email signatures, those 5 lines or less. You can pack a lot of ASCII into five lines, a lot of creativity. Social bookmarking is just another image file. Don’t they seem kind of dull when compared to the old signatures we put so much thought into?
[tags]email, posting, netiquette, ASCII Art[/tags]

2 Comments

I seldom use a signature anymore… for that very reason. :)

I only type in my URL now, nothing else. I know people notice and click on it. I stopped adding ASCII art to it when it became so complicated to make it not warp. As HTML sigs became the thing the email software was created to work with that, not the plain text. It’s too bad. Someone should rebel and start a redundant, useless, retro campaign.

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