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- From: jgoodwin@cns35.fnal.gov (John Goodwin)
- Newsgroups: alt.hypertext
- Subject: FreeLore Whitepaper Repost
- Keywords: freelore, FreeLore Project, FreeLore Whitepaper
- Message-ID: <25JAN199310173517@cns35.fnal.gov>
- Date: 25 Jan 93 16:17:00 GMT
- Organization: Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, AD/Controls
- Lines: 473
- NNTP-Posting-Host: cns35.fnal.gov
- News-Software: VAX/VMS VNEWS 1.41
-
- Sorry about the botched post ... the FreeLore Whitepaper really
- was there, at the end of the bulletin.
-
- Here it is again:
-
- ===========================
- The FreeLore Whitepaper FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- Version 1.0
- 23 January 1993
-
- CONTACT: John E. Goodwin, Moderator
- jgoodwin@adcalc.fnal.gov
- +1 708 840-8069 (voice)
-
- (c) 1993 by The FreeLore Project. You may create
- and distribute verbatim copies of this document by
- any means, provided this copyright notice is
- included.
-
- ---------------
- This document is the primary source of information
- on the FreeLore Project. It is intended to
- provide a brief summary of the Project's Goals and
- status for interested persons and publishers of
- electronic journals.
-
- ---------------
- WHAT IS FREELORE?
-
- Freelore is a concept, not a product.
-
- A short definition of Freelore would be:
-
- Any copylefted, useful information that is
- either stored in electronic format or is
- derived from electronic format.
-
- Copylefting means appending a copyright notice to
- your material that allows fair, non-commercial
- use, including at least the right to distribute
- complete, verbatim copies of your work.
- Copylefting makes your work "freely
- redistributable" (FR) without placing it in the
- public domain (PD).
-
- Thus "free" means that you are free to distribute
- the materials, not that it is necessarily free of
- charge. The FreeLore Project and other writers of
- freelore *will* try to make materials available
- at no cost. Distribution and printing costs will
- unfortunately limit this no-cost distribution to
- electronic means.
-
- The second component of the word "freelore" is
- "lore." Lore means "useful information in a form
- that can be directly interpreted by humans." Lore
- is not limited to books or written materials. It
- can encompass any medium whose output can be
- directly perceived, such as video images or sound
- recordings. Lore does not have to be stored
- electronically, although as a practical
- requirement freelore must be stored on and derived
- from electronic or magnetic media.
-
- To be considered freelore, your work must (a) be
- useful and available, and (b) must have a
- copyright that allows the work to be distributed
- and copied freely for non-commercial purposes.
- Such a copyright could look like:
-
- Copyright (c) 1993 by <The Author>. All Rights Reserved.
-
- <The Author>
- <Contact Info>
-
- You may make verbatim copies of this document for
- non-commercial purposes by any means, provided that
- this notice appears on all such copies.
-
- In addition, you may allow others to create
- derivative works by using an extended version:
-
- You may make verbatim copies of this document
- for non-commercial purposes by any means,
- provided that this notice appears on all such
- copies and that any changes to such copies or
- the original are clearly marked as such, and
- the changes, or a revised version of the
- document, are sent to the copyright holder.
-
- Commercial use may be permitted under some
- circumstances. Contact the copyright holder
- for details.
-
- If you use the longer form, you should include contact
- information after your name (a good idea anyway).
-
- The advantage of such a copyright is that it makes
- the work freely available, but does not make it
- Public Domain. You do not lose control over your
- work, and might still use it as the basis of an
- enhanced version sold commercially, later on.
- If you place your work in the Public Domain, anyone
- can change it as they please without your
- consent and even sell it.
-
- The copyright can be held by the original author,
- an organization, or a trust. The legitimate use
- of a copyright is to ensure the integrity
- (technical or artistic) of your work; it is not to
- restrict the free flow of information.
-
- It is not in the spirit of freelore to restrict
- fair use of your work in the copyright notice. By
- implication, the format of your work must be
- publicly accessible, either in a standard encoding
- such as U.S. ASCII, ISO 646, or Latin-1; if the
- material is in a binary format, then it must be
- accessible by FR software.
-
- FREELORE PROJECT MISSION
-
- The main goal of the FreeLore Project (as distinct
- from the concept of freelore) is to create a body
- of educational materials that can be used by
- anyone with access to electronic technology.
-
- MANIFESTO: The time has come for users of electronic
- technology the world over to have access to free
- educational materials in all fields.
-
- We call the educational materials explicitly
- created by the FreeLore Project, and the standards
- they adhere to, "FreeLore", to distinguish them
- from the more generic concept of freelore. Our
- "product" will adhere to certain standards
- designed to ensure it will be useful and widely
- distributed. It is our intent to create a model
- for other developers of freelore.
-
- Our materials are not intended as a substitute
- for proprietary materials, but a supplement to
- them. We believe it should be possible to acquire
- basic knowledge in any field, through at least the
- early university level, using FR materials on a
- personal computer or workstation.
-
- Creating freelore is like setting aside land for a
- national park; it is a sacrifice some members of
- society make so that the society as a whole can
- benefit. The future will judge our society on how
- well we use our resources for the benefit of all.
-
- The secondary goals of the FreeLore Project
- include providing FR software, support services
- like cataloguing and markup, and information on
- markup languages. By our software efforts and by
- providing information, we encourage the development
- of distribution channels for FR materials.
-
- The FreeLore Project encourages the creation of
- freelore that is marked up in generally accepted
- markup languages, such as TeX and the ISO Standard
- Generalized Markup Language (SGML). We are
- actively working to make SGML technology
- accessible to the computer-user of limited means.
-
- The FreeLore Project also supports the creation of
- FR software to support hypertext, multimedia
- materials, and so on. We especially support
- software that brings these technologies to low-end
- PC and workstation users.
-
- ORGANIZATION
-
- The FreeLore Project is entirely decentralized.
- Anyone can create freelore, call it freelore, and
- distribute it by any means. The FreeLore Project
- exists to help and encourage the production of FR
- materials congruent with the project's educational
- goals, to promote knowledge of freelore, and to
- encourage distribution of freelore.
-
- The central administration consists of a steering
- committee of five persons:
-
- John Goodwin,Moderator jgoodwin@adcalc.fnal.gov
- Gary Benson inc@sisu.fluke.com
- Richard Kim richard@blazers.tv.tek.com
- Gavin Nicole nick@nsis.cl.nec.co.jp
- (last position vacant)
-
- There are presently a number of working groups,
- supported by internet mailing lists. See below
- under mailing lists.
-
- FREELORE SOFTWARE SUPPORT FOR MARKUP
-
- Interim Standard
-
- The FreeLore Project has a serious bootstrapping
- problem: there is no FR software for marking up
- our own documentation in SGML or creating the
- educational materials we want. The FreeLore
- Project therefore supports the various dialects of
- TeX as an interim standard. TeX is the most
- mature markup language supported by FR software.
- We will continue to support the conversion path
- from SGML to TeX as one way to get a printable
- document, even after the final standard (SGML) has
- been adopted.
-
- We especially encourage the creation of documents
- in the Texinfo dialect, the GNU Project language
- for creating a document that can be viewed using
- GNU Info, in addition to being printed as a TeX
- file. Texinfo documents can contain embedded
- statements, such as equations, in plain TeX or
- LaTeX. Later, we will support Texinfo to SGML
- conversion and provide other browsers besides
- Info. During the interim period, we have adopted
- GNU software's coding and documentation standards,
- including Texinfo, for internal purposes.
-
- Final Standard
-
- The FreeLore Project will support SGML markup.
- Our goal is to create FR software that will be
- fully SGML compliant in the sense of ISO 8879,
- i.e. parse SGML directly, not just certain DTDs.
- Our goal is to support all the features of SGML in
- at least some of our software. We also intend to
- write FreeLore manuals describing how to mark up
- documents.
-
- PROJECTS RELATED TO FREELORE
-
- FSF and GNU Project - aiding the Free Software
- Foundation and the GNU's Not Unix Project by
- producing compatible text-processing software is
- one of the main goals of the FreeLore Project.
-
- TEI and Davenport Group - We are tracking the Text
- Encoding Initiative and Davenport Group; we urge
- those projects to converge, so that there will not
- be one standard for academic works in the
- Humanities and another for Scientific and
- Technical works. What should a multimedia
- scholarly work look like?
-
- Gutenberg - We support the creation of electronic
- versions of Public Domain texts; we also support
- making these texts widely available at little or
- no cost, and marking them up as FreeLore.
-
- WWW - We would like our final DTD to support the
- World Wide Web, a project that incorporates the
- functionality of anonymous FTP, WAIS, and Gopher
- into a single, FR server.
-
- FREELORE PROJECT MAILING LISTS
-
- You may join any of the following mailing lists.
- Enquirers are automatically placed on the first
- three.
-
- To join a mailing list, contact
-
- John Goodwin
- jgoodwin@adcalc.fnal.gov
-
- Your first message should say who you are
- and what your area of interest is. Your
- message will be sent to all persons on the
- list and you will receive a distribution
- list. For now, you contact other members
- on the list yourself. The moderator will
- not act as an E-mail repeater.
-
- Eventually each list will have its own
- moderator and a mail server will be provided.
-
- >>THE FREELORE PROJECT IS IN DESPARATE NEED OF
- A MAIL SERVER. IF YOU CAN DONATE A SERVER AND
- SOME DISK SPACE, EITHER TO DISTRIBUTE OUR
- DOCUMENTS AND SOURCE CODE OR TO STORE CONTRIBUTED
- FREELORE, CONTACT US.
-
- Here are the mailing lists:
-
- FL-ANNOUNCE Press Releases and Product
- announcements
-
- FL-BULLETIN Normal means of communicating
- project status
-
- FL-INFO What is freelore and what is the
- FreeLore Project?
-
- FL-CONNECTIVITY FreeLore as it relates to BBS
- and E-Journals
-
- FL-COPYRIGHT Moral, Political, and Legal
- issues
-
- FL-AUTHORS Support for authors using SGML or
- our software
-
- FL-INFORMAION-RETRIEVAL Cataloguing and
- Software Development for storing and
- retrieving freelore; support for WAIS and
- the World Wide Web
-
- FL-TEXINFO Support for authors writing general
- interest materials about freelore using
- the interim standard
-
- FL-SOFTWARE Software developers with the
- following sublists:
-
- o FL-BROWSER sublist SGML Browser
- (character-mode and X)
-
- o FL-DTD sublist Document Type Definition
- writers
-
- o FL-EDITOR sublist SGML Editors
- (character-mode and X)
-
- o FL-MULTIMEDIA sublist SGML Browser and Editor
- for Hytime
-
- o FL-SMALL-SYSTEMS sublist Concerns of small
- system owners and porting issues
-
- o FL-XWINDOWS sublist X window group
-
- FREELORE PUBLICATIONS
-
- The FreeLore Project provides information in the
- following areas:
-
- Finding freelore on the Internet;
-
- How to create Freely Redistributable Materials;
-
- How to mark up texts with Standard Generalized
- Markup Lanugages; and
-
- Other related international projects.
-
- Presently available and planned publications
- include:
-
- The FreeLore Whitepaper (this document)
-
- The FreeLore Copyleft Handbook (in preparation)
-
- The FreeLore Guide to Related Projects
- (volunteer needed)
-
- The FreeLore Guide to the Internet
- (volunteer needed)
-
- The FreeLore SGML Handbook
- (volunteer needed)
-
- FREELORE PERIODICALS
-
- The FreeLore Bulletin (quasi-monthly
- announcements of interest to FreeLore
- Project members)
-
- The FreeLore Tracts (articles by Project
- participants)
-
- EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS PLANNED
-
- We need writers of FR educational materials
- to tell us about them.
-
- SERVICES PROVIDED VIA INTERNET
-
- We need volunteers and organizers for these
- services:
-
- Distribution of FreeLore by mail servers or
- anon. FTP
-
- Markup Services (Internet documents, Hypertext)
-
- Cataloguing and Registration Service for FR materials
-
- SOFTWARE PLANNED OR NEEDED BY THE PROJECT
-
- We need volunteers for all projects:
-
- Design a DTD for Texinfo (John Goodwin and the
- FL-DTD group) This will be a superset of
- Texinfo, with some enhancements.
-
- Texinfo to SGML converter with support for World
- Wide Web (volunteer)
-
- Character-oriented browser for SGML (volunteer)
-
- X-Window browser for SGML (volunteer)
-
- Hytime DTD and browser (volunteer)
-
- Character-oriented editor for SGML markup
- (volunteer)
-
- X-Window editor for SGML markup (volunteer)
-
- To get started on any project, obtain a copy of
- the ISO 8879 standard (SGML) or Charles Goldfarb's
- SGML Handbook, (Oxford University Press, 1990),
- ISBN 0-19-853737-9 and a copy of James Clark's SGMLS parser
- (based on Goldfarb's earlier ARCSGML) from:
-
- ftp.ifi.uio.no SIGHyper/SGMLUG/distrib or
- mailer.cc.fsu.edu (128.186.6.103) pub/sgml/SGMLS.
-
- You should also try to get a WWW client and/or
- server running at your site.
-
- Telnet info.cern.ch or another of the sites listed
- below and login as www for more information.
-
- World Wide Web sites:
-
- info.cern.ch (128.141.201.74) [SWISS]
- eies2.njit.edu (128.235.1.43) [US]
- vms.huji.ac.il (128.139.4.3) [ISRAEL]
- info.funet.fi (128.214.6.100) [FINLAND]
-
- GETTING INFORMATION ABOUT THE FREELORE PROJECT
-
- INTERNET E-MAIL
-
- John Goodwin
- jgoodwin@adcalc.fnal.gov
-
- USENET NEWSGROUPS
-
- comp.txt.sgml
- alt.hypertext
- alt.uu.future
-
- INTERNET ANONYMOUS FTP
-
- alt.uu.future is archived on nic.funet.fi
-
- You will have difficulty getting through from
- the U.S. and probably should not try. We need
- information from anyone who is archiving this
- newsgroup or willing to make our documents
- available in the U.S. We have had one offer
- for interim help (1 MB storage), but have been
- unable to verify it. We will publish details
- in a later bulletin. At the moment, if you
- have the Whitepaper and the latest number of the
- bulletin, you have basically everything that
- is up to date.
-
- BULLETIN BOARDS
-
- We hope to have a list of BBS carrying
- information about The FreeLore Project in the
- next update of this paper.
-
- -------------(end of FreeLore Whitepaper)---------
-