\title{BCS ep group meetings} The next meeting of the BCS ep group is at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) in London on Wednesday 1st~April and will be concerned with `Text Management and Indexing', or `how to help the reader find what s/he wants'. Topics to be covered will include: `The way in' to documents; aspects of indexing and indexing software; databases, both text and relational; various case studies. The next two planned meetings will be on Thursday 4th June, again at SOAS, when the topic will be `Input and Output Devices', and Tuesday 2nd September at Nottingham. The latter meeting is at the invitation of Professor David Brailsford and his Electronic Publishing Research Group and will centre on the work they are doing. This is mainly in the area of document structure. It is planned that, as well as speakers from Nottingham, there will be other speakers on this topic. For more details, contact {\parindent10pt\obeylines David Penfold BCS ep Office 30 Edgerton Road Huddersfield HD3 3AD tel: 0484 519462} \bar \title{Typefaces Meeting} The BCS Electronic Publishing group held a meeting on 15th October 1991 at the St Bride Foundation Institute (just off Fleet Street), a suitable venue in view of its historical relevance to printing (unfortunately, not so suitable acoustically, with much of the audience finding it difficult to hear all the speakers, having to deal with poor sound dispersion, echoes, and street sounds!). Alison Black, who is freelance consultant on information design, and Paul Stiff of Reading University (hence, Stiff\&Black) began, with a talk entitled `Cut the Hype about Type'. They looked at a number of `received wisdoms', especially those foisted on us by manufacturers, and compared these with the customers' requirements. For example, there is the `democratic fallacy' -- everyone will be able to have typefaces to suit their personal needs. But the problem is not enough fonts, but not enough users who know how to use those that are already available. The manufacturers are not so much responding to demand but creating it, to produce a world of type-fanciers and type-% addicts who will need more and more fonts to satisfy their cravings! James Mosley (St Bride Printing Library) took us on what he called 'a brief canter through history', tracing the development of the Bodoni typeface and the historical influences that have a bearing on modern text design, including the thick\slash thin stresses that arose from using reeds, quills and brushes, and the pure geometry of styles on wax. Bodoni is characterised by very pronounced thicks and thins, which required exceptional press work to reproduce well in letterpress; offset litho helped to refine them even further. Mary Dyson (Reading University) updated us on the {\sc didot} (Digitising and Designing for Type) project. This multinational European project has been going for just over a year and has another two to run. Its main activity for the next two years is to design, implement and evaluate a curriculum for digital typography. It will also organise seminars, workshops and summer schools for typographers\slash graphic artists and computer specialists, trying to bring these two fields together. The computer specialists tend to see `digital typography' in terms of type design, font acquisition, font manipulation and rendering, whereas the typographers tend to be interested in the broader context of letter spacing, word spacing, leading, line length, type area, page margins. Bringing them together allows useful exploration of such issues as image processing, printing and display technology, character recognition, curve-fitting techniques, cultural and artistic tradition, visual perception, {\sc cad}, and knowledge-based systems. To date, {\sc didot} seminars have been more successful in attracting designers, but later meetings have been better balanced. Probably the most controversial presenation was given by Lyn Woosey of Adobe. She gamely introduced us to Multiple Mastering (MM) which is an extension to Adobe's Type~1 font format. Instead of using hints and encryptions to cope with the problems of scaling one master outline font, MM gives you different masters for different sizes. This doesn't mean you'll have to buy a master for every conceivable point size because MM allows interpolation between master designs. That is, if you buy a 6\,pt master and a 12\,pt master but you want 8\,pt, MM will be able to produce this by `intelligent interpolation'. But interpolation doesn't stop there -- you can interpolate between roman and italic, condensed and expanded, even serif and san-% serif if the font is available in both varieties -- you name a set of typographic variables and you can interpolate to your heart's content, at least in principle. Now, it seems only fair to point out that this horrified the audience rather than gratified them. Remembering Alison Black and Paul Stiff's strictures earlier in the day, we had visions of font anarchy. However, it looks likely that Adobe will not give its customers a completely free hand. Some practical examples of the uses of MM were given, for example, fitting type to measure, equalising columns of text translated into various languages, simulating character widths when there is a need to print from a printer not loaded vith the right typeface. However, the examples tended to be seen as either solvable by other means, of limited application, or trivial. The first multiple masters should be available early 1992. Following lunch, Peter Rosenfeld spoke about Font Technology and Intelligent Font Scaling. Peter works for URW, a German company who produce type tools such as Ikarus (designing typefaces), Linus (autotracing) and Nimbus (intelligent font scaling). They digitise about 200 new typefaces a year. Most of this is hand-digitised (using a digitising tablet) rather than scanned, and most designs are created manually rather than designed on screen. (Screens are not accurate enough, and a design takes longer, especially if corrections are required.) The day ended with Glenn Jones giving a fascinating account of the effect of desktop publishing on his company (GBM), an advertising typesetting house in Manchester. This used to be a Berthold house, and resisted moving to Macintoshes initially because of the lower quality. However, Macintoshes allowed access to a much wider type library and the ability to create one's own type, which is very important in this market. Berthold were dragging their feet, so the plunge to Macs was made. Two years ago, there were ten advertising typesetters in Manchester, all Berthold; now there are two, both using Macs. Their work has diversified, so that in addition to typesetting, they now also offer bureau work and font digitisation. They are very pleased to find that, as the requirement for trade typesetting has declined (with the recession hitting advertising badly, and many companies now producing their own adverts), they have found a future that builds upon their previous experience. The formal part of the meeting ended with a lively question-and-answer session, following which all attendees were kindly invited by James Mosley to take a look around the Printing Library -- a wonderful opportuniy to see some mediaeval digitisation, interpolated on the fly!\author{Cliff Morgan} \bar\title{Update on Didot} With the {\sc didot} (Digitising and Designing of Type) project now in its second year, it must be time to look at some of the past activities. We should remind ourselves of the aims of this three year, {\sc comett ii} project. These are to: \bitem design, implement and evaluate a curriculum for digital typography, \bitem organise seminars\slash workshops for typographers\slash graphic artists and computer specialists; \bitem publish and distribute information. The main activities to date have been: 1990,18th--19th September, Introduction to \PS, held in Lausanne; 23 October, Presentation of {\sc didot} project, also in Lausanne; 4 December, Fonts, in Paris. 1991: 28th February--1st March, Type design: radition and innovation, held in Reading; 23rd--28th September, First European Summer School in Digital Typography, in Lausanne, yet again. In more detail, the 1991 activities started off with a seminar\slash workshop at Reading University. We worked together with our partners at Basel, Sch\"ule f\"ur Gestaltung, and with the UK Associate of URW to put on this seminar\slash workshop. The main purpose of this workshop was to explore ways of introducing people to some of the issues surrounding letterform design. Workshop activities ranged from exercises in producing letterforms by making marks on paper, to demonstrations of type production methods. The traditional methods of punch cutting, matrix making and type casting were contrasted with computer-based methods, IkarusM. Seminars dealt with the concept of a workshop, in conjunction with workshop activities. There were also lectures which gave us an insight into the major influences on the development of the letterform, and a view of what digital techniques have done to the relationship between designer, production method and final result. We were hoping to meet designers, educators, and computer scientists, but the 30 participants were mostly from backgrounds of type design or production, and education. Despite this bias, the meeting did bring together an unlikely mix of people, and an unusual juxtaposition of old and new technologies. The problem with mixing people in this way is that we don't know how to talk to each other. The language of the seminars was not the normal language of computer scientists. But, we hope that {\sc didot} and more of these meetings will break down these barriers. The next activity, the Lausanne Summer School was a larger scale affair, lasting a week, with about fifty participants. Activities spanned technical talks, talks combined with workshops, computer-aided type design workshops, and lectures on relaed issues. If we chose to be technical in the mornings, we learned about font metrics, rasterisation grid fitting techniques, splines, autohinting, font descriptions, autotracing, and type forms for grey scale. If we preferred getting our hands on mice and keyboards, we were given opportunities with workshops on Fontographer, {\sc Typo}, Ikarus, the design of grey level fonts, or grappling with complexity in font design. Because of the choice provided in the programme, a sense of frustration did develop amongst those people who wished to do all things. But a very positive aspect of the week was the flexible organisation. In response to demand, we were offered mini workshops to enable us to sample virtually all the systems. The only difficulty remaining was to decide whether to wear a technical hat or a design hat. Don't we wear the one that we know fits us well, so that we don't have to struggle in the wind? Yes, there we were in our niches, confirming the need for the {\sc didot} project. If you would like to be added to the database of those interested in the project, you can contact Jacques Andr\'e directly (project coordinator) or I will pass on your details: Jacques Andr\'e (email: {\tt jandre@irisa.fr}). \author{Mary Dyson} \endinput