From cvr at river-valley.org Sat Jan 13 07:03:33 2018 From: cvr at river-valley.org (CV Radhakrishnan) Date: Sat, 13 Jan 2018 11:33:33 +0530 Subject: [Tugindia] Jan18 TUG news: birthdays, fonts, memberships In-Reply-To: <201801122312.w0CNCFBl007793@tug.org> References: <201801122312.w0CNCFBl007793@tug.org> Message-ID: Subject: Jan18 TUG news: birthdays, fonts, memberships Date: Sat, 13 Jan 2018 00:12:15 +0100 From: TeX Users Group Dear TeXers, This January Don Knuth turned 80. The birthday celebration was held in Pite\o{a}, Sweden (http://knuth80.elfbrink.se/). Here is the congratulatory address from TUG delivered by our Vice President Arthur Reutenauer: %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% One of the key notions of Aristotle's ethics is aret\=e. It combines moral virtue and generosity with excellence and living to one's full potential. It is difficult to imagine anyone closer to an embodiment of aret\=e than Don Knuth. He is not just one of the fathers of modern computer science and engineering, he also has set an example of a kind, generous and moral intellectual. For us, the TeX community, it is important to stress Don's striving for beauty and harmony in all his endeavours. His determination to make TAOCP beautiful in both its contents and its form gave us an incredible typesetting system, together with fonts and font definition algorithms. It is Knuth who showed us that beautiful thoughts must be beautifully explained and beautifully typeset, which is the fundamental principle of our community. Thus his influence goes much further than his algorithms and theorems. Aristotle linked aret\=e to eudaimonia, the human happiness, harmony and goodness of life. We congratulate Don on his 0x50 birthday and wish him many years of good and happy life. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% To continue the topic of our gifts for the occasion, I'd like to mention that Bigelow&Holmes and TUG gave a free copy of the Lucida DK fonts to the participants at the celebration. (The rest of us can buy the fonts from the TUG store: http://tug.org/store/lucida/opentype-dk.html.) Another remarkable birthday this month was the 100th (yes, the 100th) birthday of Gudrun Zapf von Hesse. On this occasion her first alphabet, Hesse Antiqua, was released in digital form after seventy years: https://www.fontshop.com/content/hesse-antiqua. At this url one can also find her short biography and great photographs. We started a new year: a good time to renew your TUG membership and to urge your colleagues and friends who use TeX to do it too. TUG activities are financed by you and other TUG members. We have some additions and changes in our membership forms and options (https://tug.org/join.html). 1. There is an experimental trial membership for users who are TUG-curious but cannot yet decide to make the plunge. It is open only to new applicants, who never have been TUG members before, and consists of a full TUG membership for one year at US$20. We offer it at a loss: the dues are lower than the physical cost of shipping TUGboat and TeX Collection DVDs. If you choose this option and decide TUG membership is valuable enough, please consider a (tax deductible in the US) donation. And, of course, we hope you will renew in 2019! 2. All new members in 2018 will get a letterpress-printed postcard *and* will participate (unless declined) in a lottery for a book by Jerry Kelly and Martin Hutner, A Century for the Century: Fine Printed Books from 1900 to 1999. 3. I would like to note that enabling auto-renew on your membership form makes your and our lives easier in 2019 and beyond. Happy TeXing! Boris Veytsman (TUG president)