Additionally, I stumbled on an interesting piece of history on Wikipedia. HTML forms could also be sent by e-mail, using a mailto:
address in the target
attribute. Didn't seem to be popular, but still cool!
Quoting the Wikipedia article:
User-agent support for email based HTML form submission, using a
'mailto' URL as the form action, was proposed in RFC 1867 section 5.6,
during the HTML 3.2 era. Various web browsers implemented it by
invoking a separate email program or using their own rudimentary SMTP
capabilities. Although sometimes unreliable, it was briefly popular as
a simple way to transmit form data without involving a web server or
CGI scripts.
And RFC 1867 (November 1995):
5.6 Allow form ACTION to be "mailto:"
Independent of this proposal, it would be very useful for HTML
interpreting user agents to allow a ACTION in a form to be a
"mailto:" URL. This seems like a good idea, with or without this
proposal. Similarly, the ACTION for a HTML form which is received via
mail should probably default to the "reply-to:" of the message.
These two proposals would allow HTML forms to be served via HTTP
servers but sent back via mail, or, alternatively, allow HTML forms
to be sent by mail, filled out by HTML-aware mail recipients, and the
results mailed back.
action="mailto:[email protected]"
which told a web browser to start an e-mail client and transfer the submitted fields as the crude contents of a new e-mail. Zero programming, just some staff to process the e-mails by hand.<ISINDEX>
, which was often plugged into a WAIS server.