On Thu, Jul 22, 1999 at 12:55:38PM +1000, Allan Rae wrote:
> 
> I thought we agreed months ago to change to the PR paragraph(s).
> Martin do you have a HTMLised version of the PR because I'd like to add a
> copy to my web site -- however with so many revisions at the time I don't
> seem to have kept the final release.  This would then replace the ancient
> v0.12 release page I currently provide for visitors to my web pages :(

I don't have html here, but this is the text of the final version of the
LyX 1.0 PR.  This was a collaborative effort, which unfortunately was
tossed by the wayside shortly after the announcement. 

//////////////////////////////

yX is an advanced open source document processor running on many Unix 
    platforms. It is called a "document processor", because unlike standard 
    word processors, LyX encourages an approach to writing based on the 
    structure of your documents, not their appearance. LyX lets you 
    concentrate on writing, leaving details of visual layout to the
software. 
    LyX automates formatting according to predefined rule sets, yielding 
    consistency throughout even the most complex documents. LyX produces
high 
    quality, professional output -- using LaTeX, an open source, industrial 
    strength typesetting engine, in the background. 

    With LyX, short notes or letters are a snap. LyX really shines, though, 
    when composing complex documents like technical documentation, doctoral 
    theses and conference proceedings. 

    LyX has undergone a quantum leap in functionality over the past 18
months. 
    This release offers extensive control over fonts, margins,
headers/footers, 
    spacing/indents, justification, bullet types in multilevel lists, a 
    sophisticated table editor, an emacs-style version control interface
for 
    collaborative projects -- the list goes on and on. LyX 1.0 includes
many 
    standard formats and templates such as for letters, articles, books, 
    overheads, even Hollywood scripts. Work continues on a growing library
of 
    "plug-in" formats and templates, in the best open-source tradition. 

    LyX presents the user with the familiar face of a WYSIWYG word
processor. 
    However, users familiar with Microsoft Word or WordPerfect may be 
    perplexed by certain basic LyX behavior. For example, repeatedly
hitting 
    the space bar has no effect! This is by design: LyX puts in the proper 
    spacing for you, intelligently. Welcome to the LyX paradigm! 

    You set the "ground rules" and place the elements of your document into 
    proper categories. Let's say, you tell LyX that a certain line is a 
    Section title. LaTeX adds the Section to your table of contents, places 
    the Section name into your page header, gives it a special "bold" 
    appearance on the page, assigns it a number or label, and tells other 
    parts of your document what page it's on, for references and citations. 
    Many of the headaches of traditional word processing just vanish. 

    LaTeX easily processes hundreds of chapter and section labels,
thousands 
    of footnotes and inserted graphics, intricate cross-references, complex 
    multi-level outlines, formatted tables of contents and lists of 
    illustrations, and exhaustive indices or bibliographies, and is rightly 
    famous for the superb quality of its output. Users already acquainted 
    with "raw" LaTeX will find that LyX offers full LaTeX transparency and 
    import/export of LaTeX documents. 

    LyX contains a fully integrated formula editor which is easily 
    best-of-breed, adding WYSIWYG point-and-click convenience to LaTeX's 
    legendary math typesetting capabilities. If you're into scientific 
    authoring, this is the jewel in the crown. TRY IT! 

    Think of LyX as the first WYSIWYM word processor: What You See Is What 
    You MEAN. All the common formatting intelligence of LaTeX is presented 
    to the user through visual controls, like a table-of-contents window 
    acting as an outline browser, "live" reference links (to figure and
table 
    captions, sections, pages and literature citations), automatic
multilevel 
    section and list numbering, and more. You tell LyX how to treat 
    particular words and lines in your document: e.g., this is standard
text, 
    this is a Section title, this is a footnote, this is a caption beneath
an 
    inserted graphic. As you click your selections, the WYSIWYM interface 
    gives you clean, straightforward "visual cues" (actually, very 
    WYSIWYG-like). 

    The approach has ergonomic advantages. You can enlarge the screen fonts 
    to suit your tastes but still have all the text on the screen --
without 
    affecting the margins and other formatting of your final output. Thus, 
    you can work comfortably on small displays (or if your eyes are tired
or 
    your eyesight is not so good) and get the final output right with just
a 
    couple of page previews using xdvi or ghostview. 

    LyX includes excellent and copious on-line help: a beginner's tutorial, 
    user's guide, and additional manuals describing advanced features.
LyX's 
    menu system exists in a dozen different (Latin character set)
languages, 
    selectable at run time. 

    LyX conspicuously lacks a filter for importing MS Word documents. The 
    LyX Team considers this not worth the effort, as word processors in 
    general are moving away from proprietary formats to the open XML 
    standard. So, as long as you need continued access to legacy documents, 
    you should retain a traditional word processor, e.g., Corel's
WordPerfect 
    for Linux. 
    LyX runs on standard Unix platforms, including Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, 
    Solaris, IRIX, HP-UX, AIX, ... even OS/2 and Cygnus/Win32 (somewhat 
    experimentally), and provides native support for PostScript(tm) fonts 
    and figures. 

    More about LyX, including screen shots and the LyX Graphic Tour, at: 

    http://www.lyx.org/ 

    What's new compared to LyX version 0.12.0? 
    ------------------------------------------ 

    Most importantly, import of existing LaTeX documents using the new 
    reLyX perl script. Better support for SGML/LinuxDoc, tables, and 
    indexing/bibliographies, etc. Summing up, it's better looking, better 
    working, better documented, and lots of bugs have been fixed. 

    How stable is LyX? 
    ------------------ 

    This release is considered stable, but as with any software, you should 
    take appropriate back-up steps in a production environment. 

    What about KLyX? 
    ---------------- 

    KLyX is a port of LyX version 0.12.0 to KDE, done primarily by Matthias 
    Ettrich and Kalle Dalheimer. It was made as a proof-of-principle, to 
    demo how good looking LyX could be made on this desktop environment, 
    and implement some advanced features which KDE, and its Qt toolkit, 
    facilitate. There is an intention to re-integrate KLyX into the LyX 
    code base; by version 1.2, LyX should be GUI toolkit/desktop agnostic. 

    Availability 
    ------------ 

    LyX is distributed under the GNU General Public License (GPL), which 
    means specifically that you can use it for free. See
http://www.gnu.org/. 

    The main LyX site is 

    ftp://ftp.lyx.org/pub/lyx/ 

    with mirrors at 

    ftp://alpha.tat.physik.uni-tuebingen.de/pub/lyx 
    ftp://ftp.lip6.fr/pub/lyx/ 
    ftp://ftp.sdsc.edu/pub/other/lyx/ 
    ftp://ftp.fciencias.unam.mx/pub/Lyx/ 
    ftp://mirror.aarnet.edu.au/pub/LyX/ 

    The source code package is available at: 

    ftp://ftp.lyx.org/pub/lyx/stable/lyx-1.0.0.tar.gz 
    ftp://ftp.devel.lyx.org/pub/lyx/lyx-1.0.0.tar.gz 

    and at the mirrors listed above. 

    You need XForms version 0.81, 0.86 or 0.88 to compile your own version. 
    Version 0.88 is highly recommended. Of course you also need LaTeX; the 
    teTeX distribution is recommended. 

    Precompiled binaries for various platforms are available at: 

    ftp://ftp.lyx.org/pub/lyx/bin/1.0.0/ 

    Binaries for i386-Linux are also available at your local metalab 
    (previously known as sunsite) mirror: 

    ftp://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/apps/editors/lyx-1.0.0-bin.tar.gz 

    Undoubtedly binaries packaged for various distributions (rpm, deb) will 
    appear soon on metalab. 

    Information and binaries for Cygnus/WinNT can be found at: 

    http://www.cs.uu.nl/~steven/lyx.html 

    The LyX Graphic Tour can be found at: 

    http://www.lyx.org/lgt-1.0/lgt.html 

    It is possible to run LyX in a temporary directory before you install
it. 

    About the LyX Team 
    ------------------ 

    The LyX Team is a world wide consortium of volunteer contributors.
Many, 
    many people have helped make the 1.0 release possible, including: 

    Lars Gullik Bjoennes, Alejandro Aguilar Sierra, Asger Alstrup, 
    Jean-Marc Lasgouttes, Juergen Vigna, John P. Weiss, Bernhard 
    Iselborn, Andre Spiegel, Allan Rae, Henner Zeller, Robert van 
    der Kamp, David L. Johnson, Amir Karger, Joacim Persson, Peter 
    Suetterlin, SMiyata, Alkis Polyzotis, ... 

    Special thanks should go to Matthias Ettrich who started it all. 

    Feedback 
    -------- 

    Please direct any comments or questions to the appropriate mailing list
as 
    described on the LyX homepage (http://www.lyx.org/). 

    Enjoy! 

    The LyX Team 

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