docs/diploma

diff thesis/tex/0-preface.tex @ 400:5254a119ad56

fixed all major trashing of the right margin
author meillo@marmaro.de
date Sat, 07 Feb 2009 23:47:34 +0100
parents 6494832a798c
children e57129f57faa
line diff
     1.1 --- a/thesis/tex/0-preface.tex	Sat Feb 07 22:51:17 2009 +0100
     1.2 +++ b/thesis/tex/0-preface.tex	Sat Feb 07 23:47:34 2009 +0100
     1.3 @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
     1.4  
     1.5  This thesis is about \masqmail, a small mail transfer agent for workstations and home networks. In October 2007 I had chosen \masqmail\ for my machines because of its small size though it was a ``real'' mail transfer agent. \masqmail\ served me well since then and I have found no reasons to change.
     1.6  
     1.7 -Unfortunately, the \masqmail\ package in \name{Debian}, which is my preferred \NAME{GNU}/Linux distribution, is unmaintained since the beginning of 2008. Unmaintained packages are likely to get dropped out of a distribution if critical bugs appear in them. Although \masqmail\ had no critical bugs, this was a situation I definitely wanted to prevent.
     1.8 +Unfortunately, the \masqmail\ package in \name{Debian}, which is my preferred \NAME{GNU}/Li\-nux distribution, is unmaintained since the beginning of 2008. Unmaintained packages are likely to get dropped out of a distribution if critical bugs appear in them. Although \masqmail\ had no critical bugs, this was a situation I definitely wanted to prevent.
     1.9  
    1.10  Using my diploma thesis as a ``power-start'' for maintaining and developing \masqmail\ in the future was a great idea. As it came to my mind I knew this is the thing I \emph{wanted} to do. --- I did it! :-)
    1.11  
    1.12 @@ -65,7 +65,7 @@
    1.13  References to external resources are marked using one of three styles, distinguished by the type of resource.
    1.14  
    1.15  \begin{enumerate}
    1.16 -\item References to books, articles, and similar documents look like this: \cite{kernighan84}. The letters represent the author(s) (here \person{Kernighan} and \person{Pike}), while the number represents the year of publication (here 1984).
    1.17 +\item References to books, articles, and documents of similar kind, look like this: \cite{kernighan84}. The letters represent the author(s) (here \person{Kernighan} and \person{Pike}), while the number represents the year of publication (here 1984).
    1.18  
    1.19  \item Websites are different from documents as they are less some text written by some author but more a place where information is gathered. Website may also change from time to time, thus the date of access is given to indicate the version to which was referred. References to websites have such appearance: \citeweb{masqmail:homepage}.
    1.20