I hear you. For a book I wrote in 1988 (using TeX/LaTeX) I had to go
to the publisher's printer (the publisher was Prentice Hall) and
reprogram their Postscript RIP so it could take the PS files I
generated. Now, despite the 20 years difference my guess is the
printers can still use PS/PDF right? My point is, that is what it
takes to make change, one of us has to go and fix it for them.
When I'm done I'll have the technology to do it (and more), but I'm
building the technology for our particular needs (and in particular
for my own very specialized needs) and we have not yet decided what to
do with it. Certainly, making it freely available to the research and
academic community is part of our mandate: since our particular
interest is scientific literature.
Sincerely,
Steven
--
Dr. Steven Ericsson-Zenith
Institute for Advanced Science & Engineering
http://iase.info
http://senses.info
On Jul 8, 2008, at 2:22 PM, Eliot Kimber wrote:
On 7/8/08 4:04 PM, "Steven Ericsson-Zenith" <steven(_at_)semeiosis(_dot_)org>
wrote:
That is sad but I guessed as much from my own experience with
publishers. We should fix that don't you think? :-)
Fixing just that business process is one of the primary services
Really
Strategies provides....
But it is seriously non-trivial to implement sophisticated, XML-based
production processes for trade publications, both because of
centuries-old
entrenched processes and biases, and because of the realities of the
need
for both very high quality typography and the need to be able to make
content changes up to and after the point that plates are on the
presses
(picture an ink-stained person with an X-Acto knife correcting a
typo....).
The technology can do it, and it's not that hard to implement, but
the human
factors can make actually doing it very difficult.
The bright light is that technology is finally catching up to
requirements,
making it much more practical and affordable to marry the best of
markup-based processes and modern computer-based typography.
And the increasing pressure on publishers to reduce costs and react
more
quickly to rapidly-changing delivery technology and consumption
patterns
means that the economic drivers for these changes are more and more
swinging
in favor of automation, sometimes at the cost of typographic
perfection or
centuries-old practices....
Cheers,
Eliot
----
Eliot Kimber | Senior Solutions Architect | Really Strategies, Inc.
email: ekimber(_at_)reallysi(_dot_)com <mailto:ekimber(_at_)reallysi(_dot_)com>
office: 610.631.6770 | cell: 512.554.9368
2570 Boulevard of the Generals | Suite 213 | Audubon, PA 19403
www.reallysi.com <http://www.reallysi.com> | http://blog.reallysi.com
<http://blog.reallysi.com> | www.rsuitecms.com <http://www.rsuitecms.com
>
--~------------------------------------------------------------------
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
To unsubscribe, go to: http://lists.mulberrytech.com/xsl-list/
or e-mail: <mailto:xsl-list-unsubscribe(_at_)lists(_dot_)mulberrytech(_dot_)com>
--~--
--~------------------------------------------------------------------
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
To unsubscribe, go to: http://lists.mulberrytech.com/xsl-list/
or e-mail: <mailto:xsl-list-unsubscribe(_at_)lists(_dot_)mulberrytech(_dot_)com>
--~--