What point am I arguing?

I find Word to be nearly impenetrable in its options, it's much much  
easier to write when I don't have all that nonsense to deal with.  
Since I only very rarely deliver formatted documents, I write and  
deliver most textual work as ASCII text. When I do have to deliver  
formatted documents, I prepare them in whatever works well for me and  
deliver them in PDF. The tools are irrelevant as long as the product  
is what the client wants. If they want a .doc file, I output the  
document as a .doc as well and supply that along with the PDF.

Having had many interactions with a many writers, most prefer to  
write in something simple and leave formatting up to the book  
designer or magazine editor. On those occasions when a document  
requires a highly standardized and complex format, like the technical  
notes I used to write at Apple, a good word processor or page layout  
application is invaluable, I agree. But that's not the writing part  
of the exercise ... even when I was doing that work, I did most of my  
writing in text and then inserted the text into the document template  
for finishing.

Perhaps this is Pentax next move: Simple, reliable word processing  
tools with great core competencies... cheap. ;-) ;-)

Godfrey


On Oct 16, 2007, at 10:09 AM, Tom C wrote:

> Of course there is a use for plain ASCII.  There's also a use for  
> formatted
> text documents.
>
> Not sure why you want to argue the point.  It's obvious that  
> formatting a
> document is much easier in a word processor than when using plain  
> ASCII,
> which is why word processing software exists.
>
> But you know this. :-)


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