The problem that needs to be addressed though, as far as standards go, is the fact that there is extremely little support for HTML based emails. This has in fact has gone backwards instead of progressing. Getting HTML to render correctly across different email clients is time consuming, frustrating and ultimately placing unnecessary costs on your clients.
I'm sure you all get emails almost on a daily basis that are an unreadable mess. This is because different mail clients (Outlook, Mac Mail, Gmail, Yahoo!, Entourage etc.) comply with different sets of standards.
Microsoft's release of Outlook 2007 was also a big knock to email standards - Outlook no longer uses Internet Explorer (that's an entire story on its own) to render HTML emails, but is instead using the inferior Microsoft Word rendering engine.
What does this mean you ask? It means that designers all over the world are being screwed by big corporations who seem to think that standards are not that important. 75-80% of people use Outlook, so 75-80% of people's HTML emails are going to look like a dog’s breakfast. Why would they do this? Who knows? This decision has said to have set standards back around 5 years. This is a very scary thought, especially when you consider how quickly the web has evolved in this time or even in the past year.
With that said, it's not all doom and gloom. The guys at Campaign Monitor have got together and are starting to do something about it. They have formed a group on Facebook called “The Email Standards Project” and on Wednesday they launched http://www.email-standards.org, a site dedicated to improving web standards for HTML emails. The Email Standards Project will be working with email client developers and the design community to improve web standards support and accessibility in email clients.
This is an awesome initiative and I'm 100% behind it. Jeffrey Zeldman and Shaun Inman are just two of the many influential people that have got behind the cause so far. You can start helping email client developers improve their software so that HTML emails can be rendered in a more consistent way by signing up on the site.











You can learn more about the movement 
not related to email, but I wanted to test a website on ie6 on a laptop running vista and was horrified to find out that vista doesnt support ie6, not even as a standalone application. more forward thinking from microsoft.
Posted by gavin on 2007/11/30