Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!mcsun!hp4nl!ruuinf!accucx!aceverj From: aceverj@accucx.cc.ruu.nl (Jaap Verhage) Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc Subject: Re: Scientific Text Editor Message-ID: <447@accucx.cc.ruu.nl> Date: 28 May 90 19:53:49 GMT References: <1990May16.090230.4513@daimi.dk> <1990May16.133349.28042@msuinfo.cl.msu.edu> <10625@medusa.cs.purdue.edu> <441@accucx.cc.ruu.nl> <36555@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU> Reply-To: aceverj@accucx.UUCP (Jaap Verhage) Organization: Academic Computer Centre Utrecht, The Netherlands Lines: 17 In article <36555@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU> brand@janus.Berkeley.EDU.UUCP (Graham Brand) writes: >In article <441@accucx.cc.ruu.nl> aceverj@accucx.UUCP (Jaap Verhage) writes: >>IMHO, emTeX is THE TeX for PC's. Commercial vendors may >>quietly go broke now. > >Where does one get this marvel of software engineering? Ah, that's the spirit. One: I've got NO commercial or commercial-like interests in emTeX (or any TeX, as they should all be public domain/shareware, if you ask me). Two: where? Here: terminator.cc.umich.edu (35.1.33.8), directory msdos/text-mgmt/TeX/emtex, which contains 6 directories disk1 ... disk6 plus documentation files in English (the originals are in German, as is the author, Eberhard Mattes of Stuttgart University). Disk1 ... disk6 fit on a 1.2M disk each. TeX and friends are included (Metafont, for example) in generic PC-, 286- and even OS/2-versions. Ah, the good works of some of us ....