02-27-2010, 05:02 PM | #271 |
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PDF, ePub, RTF. What other formats are you looking for on a reader, precisely? Oh, there are other DRM'ed formats, but you can't combine them with ADE so... (Yes, I don't use DRM'ed ebooks, but I can understand that some people do)
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02-27-2010, 06:56 PM | #272 | |
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02-27-2010, 07:23 PM | #273 | |
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The reason the ePub looks better is because it is ONE document that works on myriads of devices whereas PDF doesn't work and an unknown screen size if it's way off from the screen size. Let's say you made that PDF to be printed on letter paper. It'll look not nice on a 6" screen. |
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02-27-2010, 07:26 PM | #274 | |
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Anyway, here's what you do.... strip the DRM from the ePub and convert the ePub to LRF and then you have LRF. Problem solved. |
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02-27-2010, 10:00 PM | #275 | |
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TXT. Same reason. And it's possible to build a txt renderer that looks great; txt is simple enough that arranging typography for it should be easy. I have friend who swears by Eucalyptus on his iPhone, and wishes he could read non-Gutenberg ebooks on it, because the typography is much better than Stanza. And I like PDB, and have dozens of ebooks I made for my Clie that I currently can't read portably. While I don't care for mobi, a lot of people have a lot of books in it. There's no reason for a device to not support a dozen non-DRMd formats. |
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02-27-2010, 11:23 PM | #276 | |
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for me two formats are king. large screen or complex ? PDF small screen and simple? TXT/RTF simple. I love the covers and stuff in the lrf and other formats but its JUST eye candy and not really important till color screens come out. whats most important to me is control (MY control) and universal compatibility. I can live without the second since I can "convert" to something more compatible. I can not live without the 1st. Sure I can "crack" any encryption out their but I won't I refuse to "violate a law" (even if its a stupid immoral illegal law) to get what is rightfully mine to access. so the only logical course of action is to NOT SUPPORT such programs with my money. When I can not buy content on "my terms" and ONLY my terms I will cease buying content. |
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02-28-2010, 12:52 AM | #277 | ||||||||
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Frankly it's you who would be laughed at if you went to Taylor and Francis and suggested they use Word! My point was about published works made for wide distribution and consumption, not about causal writing. Word is fine for that. I don't see why we can't expect copy editors and typesetters at presses to know mark-up languages. (Perhaps this is why the past couple articles I've published have had so many errors.) Excel is not a WYSIWYG editor of any sort, so it's completely irrelevant. Quote:
I've been using the web since before Mosaic was released, and I think it's been looking better and better. I used quasi-WYSIWYG HTML editors in the early 90s and I've used them recently and didn't notice much difference. I say "quasi-WYSIWYG" since there is no such thing for the web, or for ebooks for that matter (at least not without PDFs as output!) What you get is going to be different on different screens, so how could what you see match it? Surely, the movement towards ePublishing makes true WYSIWYG an obsolete concept. Quote:
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In any case, ADE doesn't support MathML or SVG, and making an ePub that won' t work on it would be a bit like making a PDF that doesn't work in Adobe reader, or making HTML document that doesn't display in IE or Firefox. And you somehow found a way to make a 505 produce justified text from ePub? Especially if all you're after is an equation, SVG creation is much more work than TeX code would be. SVG is supposed to be for graphics, not equations. And my own experiments with SVG have lead me to believe that the same SVGs look completely different on different software, which kind of defeats the purpose. One of the funniest things about your "better looking example", however, is that it uses the default LaTeX font, a font specifically created by Knuth (with the help of H. Zapf) for TeX. It's a nice mathematics font, but I think there are better fonts for the text part of a book, especially on an pixel-based medium. But I've already admitted that's subjective. Quote:
My contention all along has been that a PDF made for my device looks better than an ePub made for my device. This alone establishes that PDF is still a useful format. If you're arguing a different point, then we're just talking past each other. Quote:
Please actually read my posts. I have not been arguing in favor of PDF as something to be distributed. I have been arguing in favor distribuing source documents from which PDFs can be custom made to the specifications of the user, which may well include ePub. Indeed, I've only been arguing in favor of that as a stopgap until such time as ePub rendering improves. If you're going to have a conversation with someone, it is important to try to understand the position of your conversants. I have made my position on this crystal clear in many posts throughout this thread. If you are going to continue to make irrelevant comments about irrelvant matters, I don't know how anyone is served by continuing this conversation. It just seems to me as if some people have a kneejerk reaction against PDF just because of bad experiences they have had with trying to make PDFs not made for their devices work on their devices. But that's not relevant to anything I'm discussing. Last edited by frabjous; 02-28-2010 at 01:54 AM. |
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02-28-2010, 04:02 AM | #278 |
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02-28-2010, 04:10 AM | #279 | ||||
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Forcing people into a few set packages rather than letting them lay out a simple website in a WYSIWYG editor is silly. It's the same old thing over and over - CSS has amounted to a protectionist manifesto for web designer's jobs, and I'm sick and tired of their defence of it. It's crap, let's replace it with something which can actually be implemented properly, uses XML markup and dosn't cause issues with designing WYSIWYG editors! |
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02-28-2010, 06:15 AM | #280 |
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I don't know about MathML, but ADE does support SVG. I have an ePub that has a title page in SVG that works OK with ADE.
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02-28-2010, 07:29 AM | #281 |
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That's not correct. It's Mobi who don't allow you to have other DRM formats on the device; Adobe have no problem with it. Thus you have the Sony Reader, which supports both ADE and BBeB DRM, and the nook, which supports both ADE and eReader DRM, for example.
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02-28-2010, 09:17 AM | #282 | |||||
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InDesign may provide a live preview, and allow a certain amount of editing through that interface, but it does more than that. It wouldn't be the standard if it were. Quote:
I'm not even suggesting that for regular authors. I haven't been claiming much of anything about what authors should use, but rather about what publishers should use. I think most authors should use WYSIWYM editors. Quote:
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Please give one example of one way in which CSS interferes with the kind of "WYSIWYG" (notice the scare quotes) editor you have in mind. Unfortunately, it doesn't, which is why most websites still ARE made with WYSIWYG, which results in a glut of messy mark-up, and greatly complicates a number of tasks. Quote:
But separation of form from content is definitely not silly. It is perhaps THE most essential thing for the possibility of distributing the same content across a variety of different media. It is also very important for proper textual analysis, searchability, and lots of other tasks to which text is put. Suppose I want to count how many times italics are used in a certain document. If the document is properly made with mark-up, this can be done in seconds. If it was made by WYSIWYG, then the clicking habits of the user will affect how the tags inside are distributed. WYSIWYG editors encourage people to put in manual line breaks or page breaks that only work well for their display. It encourages people not to think in terms of rules or semantic categories (e.g., this is a chapter title, this is a subsection title, this is a display, this is a citation, this is a comment), but in terms of individual parts of individual documents, and thus to inconsistencies. WYSIWYG-produced material is also inefficient in file size, and in a variety of other ways. But certainly you could have quasi WYSIWYG editors -- and they could provide a lot more options than you seem to think. Consider, e.g., a product like LyX. While you're working on, italics looks like italics and bold looks like bold, and equations looks like they're supposed, and tables look like tables. But that's is not the final output--since LyX then takes the source generated in this way and optimizes the paragraph layout and adds fine typographical features like kerning and ligatures and hyphenation, which would be impractical in the editor display. Tools like that could be standard for authors. Actual publishers could and should have a variety of tools. That's what I wrote in the paragraph above the one you quote! Last edited by frabjous; 02-28-2010 at 09:26 AM. |
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02-28-2010, 09:26 AM | #283 |
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Well the screen shot from ADE I posted was made using MathML and one of the graphics is SVG. It's a chart that's not shown in the screen grab.
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02-28-2010, 09:30 AM | #284 |
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02-28-2010, 09:34 AM | #285 |
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