Hi. I just made it up. And yes, "IN" is "Is Not"

I think you must've seen an out-of-context snippet of a previous
mailing list thread that was missing the definition. I guess that
happens sometimes. Pesky Internet!

later...

On Wed, Aug 6, 2008 at 1:01 AM, Murray Strome <wmstrome at yahoo.com> wrote:
> --- On Tue, 8/5/08, Roger <hovergo at net-tech.com.au> wrote:
> From: Roger <hovergo at net-tech.com.au>
> Subject: [scribus] New Linux User -- Scribus in place of Page, Maker 6?
> To: scribus at lists.scribus.info
> Date: Tuesday, August 5, 2008, 2:56 PM
> That said, it is incredibly useful. It is hard to use, but *primarily*
> because DTPINWP[1]. If you are familiar with DTP workflow and
> concepts, then Scribus is not so hard to learn.
>
> I give up! What is DTPINWP?  I assume the DTP is Desktop Publishing,
> and the IN is "in". Is WP Word Processing? If so what does the phrase really
> mean? I am new to Scribus and to Desktop Publishing, so am not familiar with 
> all of the terminology. Searching with Google
> only came up with some references to items in the Scribus list, but nowhere 
> that I could find
> was it defined.  I would have thought that the [1] and [2] after the acronymn 
> would have lead to a definition, but I could not find it!
>
>
>
>
>
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-- 
Jeff Silverman
jeffrey.d.silverman at gmail.com


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