Gerhard Fiedler connectionbrazil.com> writes: > So far I also haven't had any problems reading older files with newer > software from that "censored" manufacturer. (Which shouldn't be constructed > to mean that I don't think that using open formats is a good thing.) Try to run a game from that period on a new machine. Preferably a character mode one that relies on display quirks of a certain kind (CGA 'secret modes', Hercules, where are you?). Not to mention timing loops (there is shim software that is supposed to fix that). Brr. With formats, I have my own bad experiences and those of close relatives whose irreplaceable autobiographies were written on ancient versions of something or other and which they were no longer able to open 10 years later. I had to tinker with scripts and filters for two weeks until I pried a reasonable, horribly mangled in formatting, plain text version out of the binary clutches of whatever it was that was used to scramble the data on the floppy disks I got by snail mail (!). Diacritics and other important stuff like special guilemettes used in certain languages for quotations got lost and there were 120+ pages to correct. Rendering this with minimal markup in TeX took all of 30 seconds. The result is now safely stored as a tiny TeX source file that includes the plain text chapters and as PDF, PS and so on, and I am confident that there will be no further problems of this nature. If there had been a graphic in the original it would have been lost. Before choosing TeX I had a brief thought of just running the plain text through nroff/groff and trust it as is. By the way, their (my elderly relative's) email does not work *again*. I *wonder* how come my email never seems to be broken. Lucky guess? Peter -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist