from Netiquette by Virginia Shea
1The truth is that computer networking is still in its infancy. Probably nothing illustrates this more clearly than the “ASCII jail”: 90% of network communications are still limited to plain old ASCII text—that is, the characters of the alphabet, the numerals 0 through 9, and the most basic punctuation marks. It’s bad enough that multimedia communications have not been implemented in most of cyberspace. Most of the time you can’t even put a word in bold or italics!
2Because people cannot see or hear you in cyberspace, you need to pay close attention to the style of your electronic communications if you hope to make a good impression there. The style of electronic communications encompasses everything about your correspondence excepts its content, from your use of network conventions like “smileys” and “sigs” to the number of characters per line in your email messages.
3Style considerations are influenced by several rules of Netiquette, especially Rule 4, Respect other people’s time, and Rule 5, Make yourself look good online. It doesn’t matter how brilliant your messages are if they’re formatted in such a way that no one can read them.
3. Based on the article, what is likely to happen to network communications in the future?