Hans Aberg writes:
> I thought it was the opposite, Sebastian speaking about the faith common
> among businesses, but knowing nothing about the real world that researchers
> experiences: It is like teaching students at an university which thinks
well, to be fair to me, i have worked for 14 years in academia in
various roles (including teaching CS) and only 4 in business :-}
when i joined this company, I worked in TeX support, in a religious
way; 4 years later, its plain as the nose on your face that TeX _as
author/editor interface_ has lost the battle for market dominance. the
Good Guys do not always win, historically [1]
> The best way out of this dilemma for publishers and typesetters is to
> having as little as possible with this semantic aspect of contents that the
> mathematician supplies, and only provide the things that has to do with the
> general graphical look: Anything else is going to be too expensive, and the
> interface between mathematician and proof-readers does not work anyhow.
sure. i might not argue with this
> In order to support this, TeX was invented, and LaTeX was invented in order
> to support using TeX as an authoring tool, even though most mathematicians
and sadly, the mathematicians (led by the rather unusual Don Knuth)
took a license to escape from the confines of $..$ and starting
spending days and weeks formatting their bibliographies (an area
which, you must admit, is NOT a special case for mathematicians)
sebastian
[1] sorry, you 20th century mathematicians, as an ex-archaeologist,
now i am on _my_ territory.
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