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it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file.html
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<h4 class="author" property="dc:created" content="2013-04-30T19:51:20">April 30, 2013</h4>
<h4 class="author">by <span property="dc:creator">bnf</span></h4>
<p> </p>
<hr />
<h4>Other articles by bnf</h4>
<dl>
<dt><a href="/and/ufo2otf-makes-otfs-webfonts-and-css-from-ufo">ufo2otf Makes OTF’s, Webfonts and CSS From UFO’s</a></dt>
<dd>November 5, 2013 8:57 PM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/programmatically-manipulating-typefaces">Programmatically manipulating typefaces</a></dt>
<dd>May 2, 2012 11:43 AM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/downloading-funghi">Downloading funghi, from Wikimedia Commons</a></dt>
<dd>February 3, 2012 5:36 PM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/absolute-beginners-unix-for-art-students-part-2">Absolute Beginners: Unix for Art Students – Part 2</a></dt>
<dd>December 2, 2011 1:16 AM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/vector-pixels">Vector pixels</a></dt>
<dd>November 25, 2011 4:14 PM</dd>
</dl>
<h4>bnf’s comments</h4>
<ul>
<li>Dear Ned, thanks for your reaction, and the link to ... <a href="/and/hackers-culture-and-the-fear-of-wysiwyg#comment-317" title="full comment on: Hacker Culture and the Fear of WYSIWYG">read more</a></li>
<li>As a programmer, what I find more worrying is that ... <a href="/and/hackers-culture-and-the-fear-of-wysiwyg#comment-311" title="full comment on: Hacker Culture and the Fear of WYSIWYG">read more</a></li>
<li>Welcome <a href="/and/hackers-culture-and-the-fear-of-wysiwyg#comment-310" title="full comment on: Hacker Culture and the Fear of WYSIWYG">read more</a></li>
<li>Comparatively, the offer of WYSIWYG libraries is meagre. Luckily, the ... <a href="/and/hackers-culture-and-the-fear-of-wysiwyg#comment-307" title="full comment on: Hacker Culture and the Fear of WYSIWYG">read more</a></li>
<li>Good call. So I should add a part to the ... <a href="/and/ufo2otf-makes-otfs-webfonts-and-css-from-ufo#comment-271" title="full comment on: ufo2otf Makes OTF’s, Webfonts and CSS From UFO’s">read more</a></li>
<li>By the way, a related project (that might make ufo2otf ... <a href="/and/ufo2otf-makes-otfs-webfonts-and-css-from-ufo#comment-269" title="full comment on: ufo2otf Makes OTF’s, Webfonts and CSS From UFO’s">read more</a></li>
<li>Never mind, I have found a solution more easy still. ... <a href="/and/48-hours-of-writing-stylesheets-with-etherpad-and-a-gong#comment-268" title="full comment on: 48 Hours of Writing Stylesheets with Etherpad and a Gong">read more</a></li>
<li>In PHP, it would be something like this:<?php header("Content-type: text/css"); ... <a href="/and/48-hours-of-writing-stylesheets-with-etherpad-and-a-gong#comment-267" title="full comment on: 48 Hours of Writing Stylesheets with Etherpad and a Gong">read more</a></li>
<li>With PHP, there still exists some link between the urls ... <a href="/and/48-hours-of-writing-stylesheets-with-etherpad-and-a-gong#comment-263" title="full comment on: 48 Hours of Writing Stylesheets with Etherpad and a Gong">read more</a></li>
<li>hh <a href="/and/no-one-starts-from-scratch-type-design-and-the-logic-of-the-fork#comment-254" title="full comment on: No-one Starts From Scratch: Type Design and the Logic of the Fork">read more</a></li>
</ul>
<hr />
<h4>Other writers</h4>
<ul>
<li>glit</li>
<li>jenseits</li>
<li>habitus</li>
<li>tellyou</li>
<li>baseline</li>
<li>bnf</li>
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<h4 property="mt:entry_title">It Might Be a Unix Sin But I Would Like You to Add .txt As the Extension of Your README file</h4>
<article property="mt:entry_id" content="65" class="entry" id="entry-65">
<p><a href="https://github.com/klepas/open-baskerville/commit/8aaf5c54eb0c88cdbdfe2411e5f7396a88d0ab89">
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<h4 class="comments-header">6 Comments</h4>
<div id="comments" class="comments">
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<div property="mt:comment_id" content="217" id="comment-217" resource="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-217" class="comment">
<div class="comment-editor" property="mt:comment_text">
<p></p><p>I remember first starting to download open source software in the 1990ies. It is better than the usual shareware: no annyoing pop ups and countdowns. There is all these files though: COPYING AUTHORS INSTALL. What do I do with them? Luckily there is a file called README, which makes me think of the README.txt files that Explorer proposes me to open with Notepad. It turns out I can open README as well with a text editor:</p><pre style="font-size: 11px; line-height: 14px;">You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with this library; if not, write to the
Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor,
Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.</pre><p>I wonder: who are these people in Boston? Why do they ask me to write them letters in the day and age where I download their software from the internet? And why didn’t they add <code style="font-size: 14px;">.txt</code> to the end of their filenames?</p><p></p>
</div>
<p class="byline" >
<img src="/and/assets/that/are/pictures/of/author/tellyou.png" width="18" height="18" />
by <a property="dc:creator" href="http://i.liketightpants.net/authors#tellyou">tellyou</a> - <a href="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-217"><span property="dc:created" content="2013-04-30T15:18:07">April 30, 2013 3:18 PM</span></a><br />
<a title="Reply" href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="mtReplyCommentOnClick(217, 'tellyou')">Reply</a>
</p>
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<div property="mt:comment_id" content="219" id="comment-219" resource="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-219" class="comment comment-reply">
<div class="comment-editor" property="mt:comment_text">
<p>Well, at least you managed to download software that also included a runnable program. In my first encounters with open source software I would literally come across source files: computer code that still needs to be compiled (and I had no clue how that worked).</p><p>There’s open and there’s open: you might offer the source code to a program for free, but that does not mean the knowledge contained therein is accessible, unless a user is prepared to learn a lot about the culture of how programmers do things.</p>
</div>
<p class="byline" >
<img src="/and/assets/that/are/pictures/of/author/habitus.png" width="18" height="18" />
by <a property="dc:creator" href="http://i.liketightpants.net/authors#habitus">habitus</a> - <a href="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-219"><span property="dc:created" content="2013-04-30T17:56:22">April 30, 2013 5:56 PM</span></a><br />
<a title="Reply" href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="mtReplyCommentOnClick(219, 'habitus')">Reply</a>
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<div property="mt:comment_id" content="218" id="comment-218" resource="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-218" class="comment">
<div class="comment-editor" property="mt:comment_text">
<p><span style="font-size: 14px;">This also the problem with README.md. Markdown is a format for writing html codes in a typewriter plain text style, adored within the culture of programmers. Popular code hosting site <a href="/and/how-it-has-come-about-that-code-hosting-site-github-offers-visualisations-of-typeface-development" style="" target="_self" title="I like tight pants and how it has come about that code hosting site github offers visualisations of typeface development">Github</a> renders README.md for you. But when you download a software package including such a file, it breaks in much the same way as an extensionless README does: A novice user does not know with which program to open it, and the Operating System is not able to give a preview.</span></p>
</div>
<p class="byline" >
<img src="/and/assets/that/are/pictures/of/author/bnf.png" width="18" height="18" />
by <a property="dc:creator" href="http://i.liketightpants.net/authors#bnf">bnf</a> - <a href="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-218"><span property="dc:created" content="2013-04-30T17:48:32">April 30, 2013 5:48 PM</span></a><br />
<a title="Reply" href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="mtReplyCommentOnClick(218, 'bnf')">Reply</a>
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<div property="mt:comment_id" content="220" id="comment-220" resource="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-220" class="comment comment-reply">
<div class="comment-editor" property="mt:comment_text">
<p>
Maybe they can start to recognise README.md.txt?</p>
</div>
<p class="byline" >
<img src="/and/assets/that/are/pictures/of/author/tellyou.png" width="18" height="18" />
by <a property="dc:creator" href="http://i.liketightpants.net/authors#tellyou">tellyou</a> - <a href="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-220"><span property="dc:created" content="2013-04-30T18:12:28">April 30, 2013 6:12 PM</span></a><br />
<a title="Reply" href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="mtReplyCommentOnClick(220, 'tellyou')">Reply</a>
</p>
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<div property="mt:comment_id" content="221" id="comment-221" resource="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-221" class="comment">
<div class="comment-editor" property="mt:comment_text">
<p>
Try installing QLStephen: https://github.com/whomwah/qlstephen
(Put it in ~/Library/QuickLook, then run qlmanage -r to reset quicklookd.)
It makes this work.
</p>
</div>
<p class="byline" >
by <a property="dc:creator" href="http://css3.bradshawenterprises.com">Rich</a> - <a href="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-221"><span property="dc:created" content="2013-04-30T18:43:17">April 30, 2013 6:43 PM</span></a><br />
<a title="Reply" href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="mtReplyCommentOnClick(221, 'Rich')">Reply</a>
</p>
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</div>
<div property="mt:comment_id" content="229" id="comment-229" resource="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-229" class="comment">
<div class="comment-editor" property="mt:comment_text">
<p>There has been a standardized MIME type system that has fixed this issue for thousands of years^W^W^W decades.</p>
<p>'text/plain' would be the format here. Or for markdown, 'text/markdown'. Then applications would check the MIME type and one would open in a text editor and the other would open in some fanciful markdown editor (or whatever you had set for that MIME type).</p>
<p>It worked flawlessly in BeOS back in the '90s. The problem is with all these ridiculously outdated operating systems (only the visuals ever seem to be updated).</p>
<p>Don't even get me started on the state of local search vs the metadata system of BeOS' filesystem---lightning fast and you could save searches as folders that you could open and would be updated in real-time as new files that match the criteria are added.</p>
</div>
<p class="byline" >
by <a property="dc:creator" href="">BeOS Fan #1</a> - <a href="/and/it-might-be-a-unix-sin-but-i-would-like-you-to-add-dot-t-x-t-as-the-extension-of-your-readme-file#comment-229"><span property="dc:created" content="2013-08-06T14:27:10">August 6, 2013 2:27 PM</span></a><br />
<a title="Reply" href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="mtReplyCommentOnClick(229, 'BeOS Fan #1')">Reply</a>
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<h4>Latest articles</h4>
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<dt><a href="/and/hybrid-publishing-back-to-the-future-publishing-theses-at-the-kabk">Hybrid Publishing Back To The Future Publishing Theses at the KABK</a></dt>
<dd>May 10, 2018 10:07 AM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/finding-red-letterboxes-in-belgium">Finding Red Letterboxes In Belgium</a></dt>
<dd>May 10, 2018 10:05 AM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/the-underwater-screen-or-lessons-from-wordperfect">The Underwater Screen Or Lessons From Wordperfect </a></dt>
<dd>June 10, 2014 6:21 PM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/hackers-culture-and-the-fear-of-wysiwyg">Hacker Culture and the Fear of WYSIWYG</a></dt>
<dd>May 22, 2014 11:40 PM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/graphic-design-is-a-nostalgic-field"> Graphic Design Is A Nostalgic Field </a></dt>
<dd>February 19, 2014 7:02 PM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/who-makes-standards">Who gets to write the web: the power struggles around the standards</a></dt>
<dd>November 20, 2013 9:08 PM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/ufo2otf-makes-otfs-webfonts-and-css-from-ufo">ufo2otf Makes OTF’s, Webfonts and CSS From UFO’s</a></dt>
<dd>November 5, 2013 8:57 PM</dd>
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<dd>October 9, 2013 8 PM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/i-need-my-generic-font-medicine">I Need My Generic Font Medicine</a></dt>
<dd>October 9, 2013 7:55 PM</dd>
<dt><a href="/and/48-hours-of-writing-stylesheets-with-etherpad-and-a-gong">48 Hours of Writing Stylesheets with Etherpad and a Gong</a></dt>
<dd>October 8, 2013 8:06 PM</dd>
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<h4>Latest Comments</h4>
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<li><strong>Sujon Ahmad:</strong> Keep it up <a href="/and/release-early-release-often-version-numbers-for-typefaces#comment-338" title="full comment on: Release Early Release Often Version Numbers For Typefaces">read more</a></li>
<li><strong>Carly Durocher:</strong> I really like the stylized penrose triangle would you mind ... <a href="/and/illustration#comment-337" title="full comment on: Illustration">read more</a></li>
<li><strong>michaël:</strong> The recent evolution of MediaWiki is worth mentioning. One of ... <a href="/and/hackers-culture-and-the-fear-of-wysiwyg#comment-336" title="full comment on: Hacker Culture and the Fear of WYSIWYG">read more</a></li>
<li><strong>jaromil:</strong> Check the Linux Action Show on Tomb https://www.dyne.org/software/tomb there can ... <a href="/and/hackers-culture-and-the-fear-of-wysiwyg#comment-335" title="full comment on: Hacker Culture and the Fear of WYSIWYG">read more</a></li>
<li><strong>Ian Hickson:</strong> The member list is the one on the charter (it's ... <a href="/and/who-makes-standards#comment-334" title="full comment on: Who gets to write the web: the power struggles around the standards">read more</a></li>
<li><strong>habitus:</strong> Dear Ian, thank you for taking the time to respond. ... <a href="/and/who-makes-standards#comment-333" title="full comment on: Who gets to write the web: the power struggles around the standards">read more</a></li>
<li><strong>Ian Hickson:</strong> The part about the WHATWG membership is wrong. The WHATWG ... <a href="/and/who-makes-standards#comment-332" title="full comment on: Who gets to write the web: the power struggles around the standards">read more</a></li>
<li><strong>Erik:</strong> Good points. Also: writing UI is hard. <a href="/and/the-underwater-screen-or-lessons-from-wordperfect#comment-327" title="full comment on: The Underwater Screen Or Lessons From Wordperfect ">read more</a></li>
<li><strong>nike shox:</strong> do not want to be t basket vans femme pas ... <a href="/and/no-one-starts-from-scratch-type-design-and-the-logic-of-the-fork#comment-324" title="full comment on: No-one Starts From Scratch: Type Design and the Logic of the Fork">read more</a></li>
<li><strong>Tolan Blundell:</strong> As someone who's written a moderately complex CMS from scratch ... <a href="/and/hackers-culture-and-the-fear-of-wysiwyg#comment-323" title="full comment on: Hacker Culture and the Fear of WYSIWYG">read more</a></li>
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