Yuri Rubinsky Insight Foundation

About Yuri


[Yuri's Writings] [Writings About Yuri] [Bios]

A black and white photograph of Yuri on a streetcar.

Yuri Rubinsky (1952-1996)

Yuri was best known as a co-founder of SoftQuad Inc., as co-founder and chairman of the SGML Open consortium and for his work in furthering SGML and (more recently) HTML and the World Wide Web.

But anyone who knew him will remember Yuri most of all as a marvelous person -- the kind of person who brightened every room he was in and made you feel better and more noble for being with him. Yuri was bright, witty, original, insightful and, most of all, human in the very best sense. He was never concerned with technology for its own sake, but always concerned with what it could do to help people.

Yuri was an author, publisher, visionary -- a man of amazing energy and talent. Books he co-authored include A History of The End of The World (1982), The Wankers' Guide to Canada (1986) and (as co-author) Christopher Columbus Answers All Charges (1993). He was editor of The SGML Handbook (1990) and The SGML Primer (1991). Most recently, Yuri was in the process of writing two books on SGML and the Internet, as well as an historical comedy on Vergil, Mesmer and Neil Armstrong.

In addition to books, Yuri worked with others to write and produce a number of projects including the play "Invisible Cities" in 1981, a one-edition newspaper spoof, Not The Globe and Mail (1984), the Yorker magazine (1985-86), and SGML: The Movie (1990).

In Canada, he is probably best known as founding co-director of the influential Banff Publishing Workshop and for his work in applying technology to help visually impaired people.

Yuri was born in Tripoli, Lebanon on August 2, 1952. His family moved to the Toronto, Canada area when he was three. He graduated from Brock University and studied architecture at the University of Toronto. After a stint of odd jobs in the Yukon, Yuri decided to focus on publishing. He attended the Radcliffe publishing course at Harvard University in the summer of 1978 and was so impressed that he decided that Canada needed a similar course. Two years later, he convinced the Banff Centre for the Arts to sponsor the Banff Publishing Workshop.

Along with partners David Slocombe and Stan Bevington, he founded SoftQuad to develop and sell tools for SGML. Almost from the beginning, he was instrumental in bringing the SGML community together and spreading the SGML gospel. In recent years, he has also been involved in helping to shape standards for the World Wide Web.

We will never forget him.

-- Jonathan Seybold