Andreas Schuldei <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > * Frank Küster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-01-25 09:54:40]: > >> Anton Zinoviev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> > On Tue, Jan 24, 2006 at 04:55:19PM +0100, Frank Küster wrote: >> >> >> >> > It is not difficult to print two sheets - the invariant sections go on >> >> > the second sheet and FSF wins more popularity. :-) >> >> >> >> This is just working around the issue. >> > >> > Yes, it is. >> > >> >> Let the sheet instead be a coffee cup; in Germany Lehmann's sell >> >> cups with Emacs or vi commands on them. You can't add a second cup >> >> for the invariant sections, even if they fit on it, since people >> >> usually buy or donate (and use) only one cup at a time. >> > >> > The same trick works here - one cup and one sheet of paper. Not >> > everybody will like that solution but it works. >> >> Excuse me, you are telling me that a sheet of paper is a "front matter" >> or "appendix" of a cup? How do you ensure that the "front matter" is >> still readable after a couple of rounds of pouring coffee, spilling >> coffee, and dishwasher use? Or are you trying to write a satire? > > hu? most people will not confuse the cup with the paper and will > drink coffee from the cup and also wash *that*, not the paper.
Of course, but Anton would have to make sure that the cup and the paper are one single work. Even in a paperless office, the coffee room probably does contain paper, and if I have an Emacs cup and a vi cup, both with extracts from their GFDL'ed manuals, I shouldn't mix the sheets with the manifestos of both, should I? So Anton somehow has to make sure the sheet of paper can't get away from the cup... A votre santé, Frank -- Frank Küster Single Molecule Spectroscopy, Protein Folding @ Inst. f. Biochemie, Univ. Zürich Debian Developer (teTeX)

