This blog post by Eugene Spafford points out that
Microsoft Word:
- Is not a document interchange format -- it is not designed for document transport
- Is not installed on everyone's machine, nor available for everyone's machine
- Not all versions of Word are compatible with each other
- Results in huge, bloated, files for tiny content (such as memos)
- And of course, Word is commonly a vector of viruses and maicious hacks.
He includes a link to the (plaintext) "bounce message" that he uses to educate people who send him Word documents. Well worth a look.
Similar considerations apply to files produced by PowerPoint, Finale, Photoshop, and other programs. Open-source, cross-platform programs like Audacity and the Gimp aren't immune either: even when they're available cross-platform, you shouldn't use them for email.
If you're actively collaborating with somebody who you know is using the same program and version (I'm upgrading to Audacity 1.3; this isn't just a Microsoft problem by any means), by all means use that program's file format, but put it on a website and email the URL rather than trying to ship the whole darned thing in email. Many email systems will bounce big files anyway.
If you're sending a finished product, use plain text, HTML, or XML if at all possible. Other text-based standards include LaTeX for typeset documents and ABC for music. Images can be sent as PDF or JPEG, formatted documents as PDF, music notation as a zipped MIDI file, and sound files as FLAC or Ogg. But even here they're big enough that you'll want to put them on the web and email a link.
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spaf_cerias.) ETA Oh, and if you're thinking this was inspired by a particular piece of email, or a particular blog post, it wasn't. Just seemed like a good reminder, especially now that I'm trying to put together a CDROM.
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Date: 2006-12-20 03:21 pm (UTC)HTML: I agree that that's the way to go if formatting is important and the text was created in any kind of word processor. Put it on a web page and hand me the URL in email; as far as I can tell the vast majority of HTML email is spam, so I tend not to read it unless I have good reason to think it's OK.
PostScript: Both PS and PDF are potentially dangerous, and annoying. Hopefully some combination of ODF for editable documents and real image formats like JPM and SVG for page images will help.