The \year=2000 TeX calendar
Karpe writes "For those of you who don't read comp.text.tex, they are offering a calender for next year." Click below for more details - it's pretty cool.
" The TeX merchandising project proudly presents:
The \year=2000 TeX calendar
Features:
- Y2K compliant :-)
- format ISO A4
- 13 pages (12 month plus titel)
- each month with a picture by Duane Bibby from the books by Donald Knuth
- titel picture by Duane Bibby especially for this calendar
- protective cover and backcover
- wrap-around binding
- printed with 1200 dpi on 120g paper
This is a limited edition - it's printed on demand.
Price: DM 20 plus postage (3 DM Germany, 8 DM Europe, 16 DM rest of the world (air)).
Available \emph{now} from the TeX Merchandising Project.
The title picture and the calendarium can be seen at this web site
Eagerly awaiting your orders Martin"
(and the answers -- 16.5; trick question : 0.25, however, the Winchester Bushell is only 2150.42 cu.in., not 2218.2 cu.in.; Trick question: In England/US - 640, Scotland - 508, Ireland - 395; Depends on what you're measuring: hemp - 32, cheese - 16, humans - 14, meat - 8; It's actually metric - 10,000 m2)
And well, to go with the Neil Gaimen theme from last week -- From Good Omens :
Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
Ummm what if it weren't y2k compliant? Would it go back to 1900 and have pictures of women in long sleeved bathing suits?
-PovRayMan
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Check out my blackbox styles
Wait, no, they want money for it. And given how slow the site is at 4 am in Europe, I pity its /.ing in the morning...
"I will take the Ring," he said, "though I do not know the way."
Put simply, TeX brought typesetting to the masses. Knuth invented TeX because he was tired of sending manuscripts with complicated equations to the typesetter and getting back garbage. TeX allows anyone with a little patience and willpower to typeset virtually anything they want. (I use LaTeX, an extension to TeX, so my comments might only be applicable to LaTeX).
Advantages of TeX
There are many advantages of (La)TeX over other document creation systems.
I think that TeX is most appropriate for creating documents that clearly and simply convey information. It is the ideal tool for writing papers to be published in academic journals. Everything about TeX is designed with communication in mind. The default margins are wider than most other word processors. This is because people have a hard time reading wide columns of text. Look at any good book and count the number of words across a column. It will be the same as the number of words in a default TeX column.
Disadvantages of TeX
- There is a learning curve. TeX is a deep system. Learning TeX is a never-ending journey. Initially it can be painful and unproductive. Many people get discouraged.
- Using TeX is not interactive. TeX by itself is a "compiler". Given a source file, it produces an output file suitable for printing. Writing TeX can often become more frustrating than programming. Silly syntactic errors can stop the compile from completing. It gets old reTeXing after every change in your file.
- It is often hard to make formatting changes. The formatting system is complex. For example, to change margins or line spacing is not as simple as grabbing a slider.
- It is sometimes hard to tell what a given section of source file produces. \delta is different than seeing the delta symbol.
There are several expensive commercial systems based on TeX that provide an easy-to-use interface. There is also LyX, which is GPL. I do not have much experience with these, so I don't know effective they are.-Nathan Whitehead
Printing on demand, to me means, for instance, ``tex foo.tex'' followed by ``dvips foo.dvi''. Where is the TeX source? How about a calendar of which you can roll your own DVI, adjusted to whatever paper size you wish, featuring unencumbered images? Who cares about Bibby drawings? Maybe some nice mathematical formulas, graphs and diagrams would do instead. ;) Or each page featuring some different area of typesetting that one can engage in: music, organic chemistry, mathematics, Klingon, etc. Or some way out there things done up in MetaPost.
I guess we have two months to cook up a freeware TeX calendar.