The thing about the web is that it was for amateurs. Things like separation of content and style are great for engineers creating larger-scale maintainable sites, but they're absolutely not helpful for new users. Being able to take a text file and add a couple of tags around some text you want to emphasise is a positive advantage for such individuals. It rewards small experiments. Understanding CSS is, by contrast, quite the undertaking.
Hypertext had been around for quite some time before the web, and there's still some academics I know who seem to scratch their heads at the success of such an simplistic, impure form. To me, its simplicity is a reason for its success, while projects like Xanadu make a fundamental error in not considering enough the importance of barrier to entry.
The thing about the web is that it was for amateurs. Things like separation of content and style are great for engineers creating larger-scale maintainable sites, but they're absolutely not helpful for new users. Being able to take a text file and add a couple of tags around some text you want to emphasise is a positive advantage for such individuals. It rewards small experiments. Understanding CSS is, by contrast, quite the undertaking.
Hypertext had been around for quite some time before the web, and there's still some academics I know who seem to scratch their heads at the success of such an simplistic, impure form. To me, its simplicity is a reason for its success, while projects like Xanadu make a fundamental error in not considering enough the importance of barrier to entry.