- From: Eric S. Raymond <esr@locke.ccil.org>
- Date: Fri, 22 Dec 1995 13:00:31 -0500 (EST)
- To: www-html@w3.org
This is a belated self-intro for the www-html list intended to make the agenda behind my questions and suggestions ("A lurker speaks up...") clear. My full name, in case it doesn't show in your headers, is Eric S. Raymond. I am very interested in dual-mode publishing, using the same markup for hypertext and typesetting for paper. I am accordingly interested in HTML enhancements that permit it to carry all the information (in conjunction with style sheets and/or rendering filters) needed to do production- quality typesetting. I am heavily involved in Linux development (I co-maintain one of the Linux core libraries, ncurses). I'm specifically interested in Linux web tools, and may be joining Phil Hughes's project to hack Arena into a free, highly capable, Linux-hosted browser, if it gets off the ground. I am involved with Java, and maintain the Java-on-Linux HOWTO for the Linux Documentation project. I will be the first technical reviewer and rescue writer for O'Reilly Associates' upcoming series of Java books. I am the maintainer of the Jargon File and editor of "The New Hacker's Dictionary", an early and gratifyingly successful experiment in dual-mode publishing (HTML version available from my home page). Presently I maintain the masters in a heavily hacked version of Texinfo and generate from that ASCII, dvi and PostScript. When I can maintain the masters in HTML and filter that to production-quality PostScript, I will consider HTML mature ;-). I have a strong background in language, interpreter, and compiler design. I have been thinking about hypertext systems for many years and have written or co-written at least three, one of which (VH) is still in active use on the net. I'm also intimately familiar with many text-formatting tools, including {gtn}roff, pic, tbl, eqn, TeX, Texinfo, and Scribe. I tend to approach HTML as a language for content-based format description that happens to have a distributed namespace, rather than as a hypertext system that happens to do display formatting. It may be of interest to some of you that I wrote the VC and GUD modes in Emacs 19, and would like to help develop better Web tools for Emacs. You can find my home page at http://www.ccil.org/~esr/home.html. -- >>esr>>
Received on Friday, 22 December 1995 12:42:18 UTC