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- Newsgroups: comp.unix.questions
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!mel.dit.csiro.au!yarra!bohra.cpg.oz.au!als
- From: als@bohra.cpg.oz.au (Anthony Shipman)
- Subject: Re: IS UNIX DEAD?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.055525.27004@bohra.cpg.oz.au>
- Organization: Computer Power Software
- References: <0105002B.ibrvd6@digtype.airage.com> <1992Nov11.215409.18067@osuunx.ucc.okstate.edu>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 05:55:25 GMT
- Lines: 37
-
- martin@datacomm.ucc.okstate.edu (Martin McCormick) writes:
-
- >In article <0105002B.ibrvd6@digtype.airage.com> jeff@digtype.airage.com writes:
- >>Sun has also put their full documentation on CD-ROM--it's called Answerbook.
- >>It includes Postscript versions of all of the standard man pages,
- >>plus the full paper documentation set (normally 8 or so volumes weighing
- >>in at 80 or so pounds!). I also have hardware and configuration manuals
- >>for most of the desktop systems. It completely fills a 600 meg CD.
-
- >First, I completely agree with Jeff's enthusiasm for this system. It is good
- >and probably is the wave of the future. I do have one gripe, however.
- >As I have said, in other postings, Postscript is a half-finished job until
- >somebody comes up with a method for converting it back into standard ASCII
- >text like the lines you are reading, now. The windows-oriented approach is
- >totally useless for those of us who are blind and use speech synthesizers.
- >We were able to cobble together a small C program to strip out all that
- >Postscript language and display a completely deformatted stream of data.
- >It beats nothing, though not by much. I would love to help fix this problem,
- >but I need to find a document explaining Postscript in electronic form so
- >I can read it and figure out how to tackle this beast.
-
- You have the wrong end of the stick. Postscript is for describing the visual
- appearance on a page. To try to convert it back to unformatted text strikes me
- conceptually as being a bit absurd.
-
- To help you you want the documentation supplied in a format-independent way
- such as SGML. SGML describes the information and structure of the document
- without being tied to some particular output device. Then the hypertext links
- will be explicit and you can have a voice operated navigation system.
- High-end documentation systems such as Framemaker and Interleaf deal with SGML
- these days so it should all be technically feasible.
-
- --
- Anthony Shipman "You've got to be taught before it's too late,
- CP Software Export Pty Ltd, Before you are six or seven or eight,
- 19 Cato St., East Hawthorn, To hate all the people your relatives hate,
- Melbourne, Australia, 3121 You've got to be carefully taught." R&H
-