texlive[44873] Master/texmf-dist: empty dir, sync

commits+karl at tug.org commits+karl at tug.org
Sun Jul 23 22:34:00 CEST 2017


Revision: 44873
          http://tug.org/svn/texlive?view=revision&revision=44873
Author:   karl
Date:     2017-07-23 22:34:00 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2017)
Log Message:
-----------
empty dir, sync

Modified Paths:
--------------
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/bibtex/bib/beebe/typeset.bib

Removed Paths:
-------------
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/fonts/cmap/adobemapping/cmap-resources/cmapresources_cns1-6/

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/bibtex/bib/beebe/typeset.bib
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/bibtex/bib/beebe/typeset.bib	2017-07-23 13:31:08 UTC (rev 44872)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/bibtex/bib/beebe/typeset.bib	2017-07-23 20:34:00 UTC (rev 44873)
@@ -2,9 +2,9 @@
 %%% ====================================================================
 %%%  BibTeX-file{
 %%%     author          = "Nelson H. F. Beebe",
-%%%     version         = "2.41",
-%%%     date            = "13 April 2017",
-%%%     time            = "17:16:13 MST",
+%%%     version         = "2.42",
+%%%     date            = "05 July 2017",
+%%%     time            = "07:00:49 MDT",
 %%%     filename        = "typeset.bib",
 %%%     address         = "University of Utah
 %%%                        Department of Mathematics, 110 LCB
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
 %%%     telephone       = "+1 801 581 5254",
 %%%     FAX             = "+1 801 581 4148",
 %%%     URL             = "http://www.math.utah.edu/~beebe",
-%%%     checksum        = "31906 22719 107203 1010745",
+%%%     checksum        = "25832 22794 107662 1014853",
 %%%     email           = "beebe at math.utah.edu, beebe at acm.org,
 %%%                        beebe at computer.org (Internet)",
 %%%     codetable       = "ISO/ASCII",
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@
 %%%                        and PDF (Portable Document Format), and
 %%%                        sgml.bib covers SGML and HTML.
 %%%
-%%%                        At version 2.41, the year coverage looked
+%%%                        At version 2.42, the year coverage looked
 %%%                        like this:
 %%%
 %%%                             1881 (   1)    1927 (   0)    1973 (  10)
@@ -86,13 +86,13 @@
 %%%                             1922 (   0)    1968 (   4)    2014 (   1)
 %%%                             1923 (   1)    1969 (   9)    2015 (   3)
 %%%                             1924 (   0)    1970 (   7)    2016 (   1)
-%%%                             1925 (   0)    1971 (  11)
+%%%                             1925 (   0)    1971 (  11)    2017 (   1)
 %%%                             1926 (   1)    1972 (   8)
 %%%                             19xx (   3)
 %%%                             20xx (   2)
 %%%
 %%%                             Article:        320
-%%%                             Book:           302
+%%%                             Book:           303
 %%%                             InCollection:     5
 %%%                             InProceedings:   54
 %%%                             Manual:          42
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@
 %%%                             Proceedings:     33
 %%%                             TechReport:      31
 %%%
-%%%                             Total entries:  837
+%%%                             Total entries:  838
 %%%
 %%%                        This bibliography has been collected from
 %%%                        bibliographies in the author's personal
@@ -21876,6 +21876,81 @@
                  Index",
 }
 
+ at Book{Kurlansky:2017:PPT,
+  author =       "Mark Kurlansky",
+  title =        "Paper: paging through history",
+  publisher =    "W.W. Norton and Company",
+  address =      "New York, NY, USA",
+  pages =        "xx + 389",
+  year =         "2017",
+  ISBN =         "0-393-23961-6 (hardcover), 0-393-35370-2 (paperback)",
+  ISBN-13 =      "978-0-393-23961-4 (hardcover), 978-0-393-35370-9
+                 (paperback)",
+  LCCN =         "TS1090 .K87 2016",
+  bibdate =      "Wed Jul 5 06:52:35 MDT 2017",
+  bibsource =    "fsz3950.oclc.org:210/WorldCat;
+                 http://www.math.utah.edu/pub/tex/bib/typeset.bib",
+  abstract =     "Through tracing paper's evolution, Mark Kurlansky
+                 challenges common assumptions about technology's
+                 influence, affirming that paper is here to stay. Paper
+                 is one of the simplest and most essential pieces of
+                 human technology. For the past two millennia, the
+                 ability to produce it in ever more efficient ways has
+                 supported the proliferation of literacy, media,
+                 religion, education, commerce, and art; it has formed
+                 the foundation of civilizations, promoting revolutions
+                 and restoring stability. One has only to look at
+                 history's greatest press run, which produced 6.5
+                 billion copies of Quotations from Chairman Mao (which
+                 doesn't include editions in 37 foreign languages and in
+                 braille) to appreciate the range and influence of a
+                 single publication, in paper. Or take the fact that one
+                 of history's most revered artists, Leonardo da Vinci,
+                 left behind only 15 paintings but 4,000 works on paper.
+                 And though the colonies were at the time calling for a
+                 boycott of all British goods, the one exception they
+                 made speaks to the essentiality of the material; they
+                 penned the Declaration of Independence on British
+                 paper. Now, amid discussion of ``going paperless'' ---
+                 And as speculation about the effects of a digitally
+                 dependent society grows rampant --- we've come to a
+                 world-historic juncture. Thousands of years ago,
+                 Socrates and Plato warned that written language would
+                 be the end of ``true knowledge,'' replacing the need to
+                 exercise memory and think through complex questions.
+                 Similar arguments were made about the switch from
+                 handwritten to printed books, and today about the role
+                 of computer technology. By tracing paper's evolution
+                 from antiquity to the present, with an emphasis on the
+                 contributions made in Asia and the Middle East, Mark
+                 Kurlansky challenges common assumptions about
+                 technology's influence, affirming that paper is here to
+                 stay.",
+  acknowledgement = ack-nhfb,
+  subject =      "Papermaking; History; Paper industry",
+  tableofcontents = "Prologue: The technological fallacy \\
+                 Being human \\
+                 The moths that circle a Chinese candle \\
+                 The Islamic birth of literacy \\
+                 And where is X{\'a}tiva? \\
+                 Europe between two felts \\
+                 Making words soar \\
+                 The art of printing \\
+                 Out from Mainz \\
+                 Tenochtitl{\'a}n and the blue-eyed devil \\
+                 The trumpet call \\
+                 Rembrandt's discovery \\
+                 The traitorous corruption of England \\
+                 Papering independence \\
+                 Diderot's promise \\
+                 Invitation from a wasp \\
+                 Advantages in the head \\
+                 To die like gentlemen \\
+                 Return to Asia \\
+                 Epilogue: change \\
+                 Appendix: Timeline",
+}
+
 @Misc{Anonymous:20xx:W,
   author =       "Anonymous",
   title =        "WhatTheFont",



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