From lyx-users Wed Mar 25 17:03:16 2009 From: Les Denham Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 17:03:16 +0000 To: lyx-users Subject: Re: Help for paper about LaTeX/LyX and the meaning of life Message-Id: <200903251203.16673.ldenham () hal-pc ! org> X-MARC-Message: https://marc.info/?l=lyx-users&m=123800066210449 On Wednesday 25 March 2009 03:32:56 am Manveru wrote: > All that and previous discussion leads me to the conclusion, that every > publisher preparing books for the market (in does not matter wheter it is a > book for bookstore or some publication for professors), who does not invest > in professional human-driven typesetting do the assassination of the six > hunderd years history of typesetting. Please keep than on mind. Manveru, Perfection is very nice until it runs into economics. The ultimate example of your goals is William Morris's Kelmscott Press. Morris treated a printed book as a work of art. Kelmscott Press operated from 1891 to 1898, and produced 18,000 copies of 53 different books. The books were and are works of art. Few readers could afford them when they were printed; few collectors can afford them now. The Press ceased operations because Morris ran out of money. It never made a profit, never broke even, in spite of the high prices charged for its books. Software like LaTeX and LyX allows non-experts to approximate some of the goals of typographers like Morris without incurring his costs. The software solutions do not reach the standards of the best book designers and typographers, but they can get closer than many (most?) published books do. Les