A few recollections from my freelance days

A slight departure from the usual posts on this blog 🙂

In the early 1990s, before large-scale offshoring came into play, I started working freelance, editing and typesetting technical books using Windows-based software (FrameMaker, before Adobe bought it) and certainly prior to PDF as the only way to transfer files to printers and “film bureaux”. Film, remember that? Positive/negative, right/wrong reading emulsion side down… Printers and bureaux were dominated by the Macintosh (maybe they still are) so without the common use of PDF, transferring Windows-generated typeset material/files to commercial printers was, at times, a bit of a nightmare. I was working for a number of big book publishers who all used different printers, each with their own requirements for accepting electronic files which inevitably meant PostScript if you were working on a PC.

I still have vivid memories of generating and shipping hundreds of megabytes of raw PostScript code using SyQuest drives: then the only “high capacity” removable media accepted by printers. Ubiquitous, low cost, high-speed electronic transfer of huge amounts of data was still in the future, unless you had ISDN, which I didn’t and couldn’t afford. My first forays into the online world was the Bulletin Board and CompuServe and I was the proud owner of a US Robotics Sportster 14,400 Fax modem. I remember the joys of the Hayes command set, 7 or 8 bit data, odd or even parity and all the weird arcania of comms technology of the time. Enough already, too many memories!

Incidentally, a single 88 MB SyQuest disk cost (from memory) around £60 in the early to mid 1990s! I confess that I hated using SyQuest drives because you could never be sure that a disk formatted for the PC could be mounted (i.e., opened) on a Macintosh at the printers due to disk formatting issues. After generating 500MB of PostSript data and couriering it across the Atlantic to meet a deadline you don’t want to hear that your disks can’t be read. The introduction of the Iomega ZIP drive was a blessing and wiped out SyQuest’s market, virtually overnight. Whenever I recall SyQuest drives I cannot help but think of the Trabant. Yes I should have used a Mac, maybe, but the vast majority of Word files (for technical books) I received from publishers were generated on a PC: in an era when transferring Word files between Mac to Windows was not always a “joy” and cleaning up the “converted” Word files could be a lot of work.

Generating reliable PostScript code via the Windows 3.1 PostScript printer driver was an excercise in the darkest arts and the main reason I had to become, at the time, expert in PostScript programming: to understand what was going on and how all those bizarre options in the print dialog box affected the PostScript code. Page independence, VM memory in the printer and a host of other settings which made the difference in getting the PostScript to RIP successfully, or not. I recall the “font wars” of TrueType vs Adobe Type 1 font file formats: “Type 1 rules, TrueType sucks” was an oft-quoted mantra of the times and certainly the conversion of TrueType fonts for inclusion in the PostScript data stream was not always without hassles…

Anyway, enough of this. Monty Python Yorkshire Man sketch, anybody?

This looks useful: Gow – The lightweight alternative to Cygwin

Just received notification of this:

“Gow (Gnu On Windows) is the lightweight alternative to Cygwin. It uses a convenient Windows installer that installs about 130 extremely useful open source UNIX applications compiled as native win32 binaries. It is designed to be as small as possible, about 10 MB, as opposed to Cygwin which can run well over 100 MB depending upon options.”

https://github.com/bmatzelle/gow/wiki

Just off to grab this now!

Looking for a new position in publishing

Hmmm, I was in two minds on whether to make such a post but hey, nothing ventured, nothing gained, as they say. I have this blog so I might as well use it!

Life circumstances have taken a bit of a turn recently and I’m now looking for a new position in publishing. If you drop by this site and know anyone in publishing who could use my experience/expertise, do please get in contact through the contact me page. I’m based in Bristol, UK.

Profile: 20 years of publishing experience, spanning senior editorial roles (Publisher and Senior Publisher) through to highly technical positions in print/electronic journal production and software development. Proven innovator, versatile and creative individual able to make significant contributions across multiple functions.

  • Track record of winning prizes for publishing process and product/service innovation.
  • Desire to be involved with projects which fundamentally redesign digital publishing workflows: content strategy, authorship systems, component content management systems. To integrate content creation, review/approval, production, publishing and maintenance.
  • In-depth understanding of journal publishing and production workflows (including peer review).
  • World-class expertise in proceedings publishing.
  • Significant experience of open access publishing.
  • Expert in Editorial Manager (journal submission and peer review system): from configuration to full site deployment.
  • Extensive technical expertise applicable to a wide range of publishing operations.
  • Able to communicate with, and work very effectively across, numerous publishing functions.
  • Innovative “out of the box” thinking, problem-solving attitude.
  • Strong interest in STM publishing opportunities presented by new web technologies.

Career interests: I am not seeking a purely technical position. Ideally, I would like to leverage my experience within a team environment focussed on product development, automation and innovation of publishing workflows, business analysis, process efficiencies, creation of new products and services.

Professional values: Deeply committed to, and passionate about, delivering outstanding customer service and experience. Methodical, with a high level of attention to detail. Enjoy seeing ideas being put into practice and yielding tangible results.

If this sounds interesting, do please get in contact.

Many thanks!

Apologies for the recent lack of new posts

It has been a busy few weeks with career issues, general directions in life, and painting and decorating a new extension to our home so that has had to take priority over blogging…. However, I soon hope to resume a higher frequency of posts, picking up on a number of loose threads I have promised to address. So, do please keep this blog on your radar, and stay tuned for a variety of new content. I’d love to hear from anyone who would be interested to contribute an article, especially on the use of LuaTeX within STM publishing and challenges faced with using this amazing engine to write and submit papers…

Take care

Graham