Hmmm, just to add my meaningless .02c to the discussion My wife wrote her final year thesis using a LaTeX/emacs. Her degree was in Interior Design, not exactly a prime candidate for using LaTeX/TeX. She coped with the manual very well, produced a beautiful piece of work, and used inserted postscript output from Autocad for schematics and site plans. I had a good look around, and there was no package which came remotely close to handling the variety of graphics formats needed, as well as the ability to alter the document style at a whim. Sure the learning curve was a little steep, but she was learning to handle DOS at the same time (aak). I agree that TeX is a little tough to use as an end user (whatever that is :) ) but LaTeX is a good alternative, and, as I have found out in the process of writing my PhD using LaTeX, it is the *only* document typesetter which does mathematics properly (yes I've seen commercial packages which claim to do maths.. but blech..) Wasn't it Donald Knuth who said that the real meaning of WYSIWYG is What You See Is All You've Got? Alistair (wonders about the use of wives as software user-friendliness benchmarks) Scott afs@tauon.ph.unimelb.edu.au
| Greg KH | Re: Dual-Licensing Linux Kernel with GPL V2 and GPL V3 |
| Greg Kroah-Hartman | [PATCH 006/196] Chinese: add translation of oops-tracing.txt |
| Luciano Rocha | usb hdd problems with 2.6.27.2 |
| Roland Dreier | Re: Integration of SCST in the mainstream Linux kernel |
git: | |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 15/37] dccp: Set per-connection CCIDs via socket options |
| David Miller | [GIT]: Networking |
| Natalie Protasevich | [BUG] New Kernel Bugs |
