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Feature: Free Software

A 100% free software-based Italian publisher

By Marco Fioretti on May 05, 2006 (8:00:00 AM)

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Journalist Zenone Sovilla founded publishing company Nonluoghi Libere Edizioni (the name approximately means "Non-Places Free Editions") in 2002 after two years' experience running an online community called Nonluoghi.it, which he created to discuss social and political issues, with particular attention to the relationships between democracy and information. The focus of the newborn publishing house was on participatory democracy, libertarian theories, and nonviolence. Right at the start, Sovilla decided that this new business would not only support the philosophy behind free software, but also practiced it in full, since "it looked to be the only way to be consistent with the company mission." In practice, adopting free software was a bold choice in autumn 2001.

Setting up an online presence was almost a piece of cake. Nonluoghi.org runs without problems on PHP-Nuke, and its online book store will be based on osCommerce, while the Nonluoghi.it forum is built with XOOPS.

The actual creation of books, however, was an entirely different issue. Sovilla is not a programmer, just a determined end user. His main problem was that, regardless of the maturity (or lack thereof) of Linux as a publishing and desktop platform in 2001, Sovilla couldn't find any other publisher who was already working in the same way. Even the most militant and progressive ones were firmly fixed on proprietary software.

Nevertheless, Sovilla started studying every free software application that was available for pre-press work. After some trial and error, he found that a SUSE distribution running on an Apple iMac G3 gave him everything he needed to create his cover graphics and perform pagination, and at the beginning of 2002 he was finally able to begin production. Later, he replaced SUSE with Mandrakelinux. These days, after a period spent on SUSE 9.x PCs, Ubuntu is the default distribution for all Nonluoghi workstations.

Sovilla's first trials in 2002 were made with Scribus 0.6, which had some problems with font management and was quite slow to use on a 230-page book. Eventually, everything went well, thanks to direct contacts with Scribus developer Franz Schmid. Another Nonluoghi author and Sovilla's friend, free software programmer and advocate Mario Alexandro Santini, helped him solve many other software problems. Several LUG members from Belluno and Trento in northeastern Italy were also helpful on more than one occasion.

After his initial experience with Scribus, Sovilla limited its usage to covers, and moved other tasks to OpenOffice.org, which he found simpler to use for pagination and word processing. Sovilla also tried to create LaTeX books via Lyx, but, due to lack of time, he never managed to make it work satisfactorily. All Nonluoghi graphics, including those for the covers, are made with the GIMP.

Before OOo was able to do it natively, Nonluoghi converted manuscripts to PDF with ps2pdf. With both Scribus and OOo, there were never any PDF-related problems with interchanging files with the professional typographers who were actually printing the books. Some of them were Mac shops, other were Windows-based, but all were almost always able to create top-quality books straight from the PDF files generated with free software. The only exceptions were the manual checks and corrections needed to work around the absence of direct four-color management in the GIMP. Even the bar codes, created with bookland.py, never created problems. Nonluoghi creates its catalogs, brochures, and other advertising material with these same tools. Since the foundation of Nonluoghi, Sovilla has published 19 books in this way. All of them are available under a license that allows duplication for non-commercial purposes. Their colophons mention that each book was created on GNU/Linux desktops with GPL software, and in some cases list the software applications that were used. Several Nonluoghi books, including one from Sovilla himself entitled Bicicrazia. Pedalare per la libert? (Bicycle-cracy. Pedaling for freedom), can be downloaded at no cost in PDF format. Even if you don't read Italian, you can see from the documents the results of a 100% FOSS-only publishing workflow.

The next steps

Today, Sovilla acknowledges that choosing a 100% free software workflow complicated his working life. He also notes, however, that a great part of his troubles came from an early start, at a time when programs such as Scribus weren't mature enough yet. Today, he says, the situation has improved considerably, and publishers who are willing to experiment with an alternative software platform can, and should, try it without fear: "Right now, GNU/Linux-based pre-press is absolutely doable without problems."

This year, maybe because Linux publishing has become so easy, Sovilla will turn over management of Nonluoghi to a cultural association (of which he remains a member). The business will continue to be based on, and to experiment with, GNU/Linux software.

One of the reasons Sovilla is reducing his book-related activities is because he has started to explore another kind of publishing. Today you are much more likely to find him working as a journalist with a camcorder or editing the resulting video, of course on a GNU/Linux desktop. After some experiments with Lives, Cinelerra, and MainActor on SUSE, he is now using Kino and Audacity for audio and video editing. Sovilla says, "From books to video publishing using only FOSS tools? Hey, you can do it, if you just want it!"

Marco Fioretti is the author of The Family Guide to Digital Freedom and contributes regularly to Linux.com and other IT magazines.

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CMYK support

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 06, 2006 01:35 AM
GIMP still lacks CMYK support, AFAIK an important feature for printing. I'm sure that for most people this doesn't make any difference, but especially when creating covers for books, this is an important feature.

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Re:CMYK support

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 06, 2006 02:54 AM
This may have been addressed in the article, when the author was speaking of sending the<nobr> <wbr></nobr>.PDF's off to the publishers.

"Some of them were Mac shops, other were Windows-based, but all were almost always able to create top-quality books straight from the PDF files generated with free software. The only exceptions were the manual checks and corrections needed to work around the absence of direct four-color management in the GIMP."

From what I read, this didn't prove to be a significant problem for this company with his publishers, though I have heard others mention the concern before.

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Re:CMYK support

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 06, 2006 03:57 AM
Absolutely correct. As far as my industry is concerned, with a total lack of color-profile support, not to mention CMYK...it's not only useless, but a liability. Relying on the printer to convert RGB to CMYK is expensive in added processing fees and prepress work but also, where advertising is concerned, in color shifts. When your output is CMYK and your workspace is RGB only, your ability to be reliable to the client as far as reproducing color is at best, extremely sketchy and having the printer manage your color removes your ability to maintain quality on your end. This results in having to accept eating ads by offering make-goods every time a client's Pantone or CMYK build logo color goes to hell because you converted without any calibrated correction. This can kill a publication.

Now, for layout, Scribus and OOo, yeah, maybe. But, as much as I like and use GIMP, no. I also have some qualms about the PDF process-whether or not profiles can be assigned to comply with print standards, such as the Web-Coated SWOP standards used by most US and Japanese printers. Sure, the printer had no problems using and converting the files. That's because they CHARGE for it. They're cleaning up messes, it's how they make money. Paying a printer extra and unnecessary money to make do with an inferior product is not what I call a success.

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Re:CMYK support

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 08, 2006 03:52 AM
Relying on the printer to convert RGB to CMYK is expensive in added processing fees and prepress work but also, where advertising is concerned, in color shifts.

Probably worth pointing out that this is total bullshit. Designers all over the world are working with RGB images sent to them by various people (photographers, other designers etc) and sending them to press with no big difficulty. Any designer who required CMYK only would be out of work very quickly in this age of digital cameras.

If a particular colour is important for an advert, the issue will be spot colour, not CMYK, and that can be solved with a penciled note as to what the spot colour should be. Hardly rocket science.

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Re:CMYK support

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 08, 2006 04:28 AM
When your output is CMYK and your workspace is RGB only, your ability to be reliable to the client as far as reproducing color is at best, extremely sketchy
Unless you're using a projector, your workspace is always going to be RGB. You know what they say about bad workmen?

We have had issues with oo.org generated PDF not passing our printers RIP but lack of CMYK support in the GIMP has never been a problem for us.

PS: I'm not the article submitter.

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Go Read

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 06, 2006 08:22 AM
<a href="http://www.blackfiveservices.co.uk/separate.shtml" title="blackfiveservices.co.uk">http://www.blackfiveservices.co.uk/separate.shtml</a blackfiveservices.co.uk>

Ok its not in system CMYK but if somewhere is going to charge you for it. Gimp has third party fixs for it. Stop kicking a dead horse and hand over some developers or cash to the project.

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From the author, re:CMYK support (OR OTHER ISSUES)

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 06, 2006 11:41 AM
Hello,

Please also contact Zenone directly to discuss these topics and share tips and tricks on CMYK and other publishing issues. I already asked him to answer directly on this forum, since we couldn't fit everything he had to say in the word count foreseen for this article.

Thanks,
Marco Fioretti

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Re:From the author, re:CMYK support (OR OTHER ISSU

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 06, 2006 08:48 PM
Word count? Running out of disk space?

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Re:From the author, re:CMYK support (OR OTHER ISSU

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 06, 2006 10:31 PM
Word count? Running out of disk space?


No. Reader's interest and similar style issues. These articles are not meant to be one-stop manuals.

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CMYK(and other modes) support in GIMP

Posted by: Greg Folkert on May 06, 2006 09:54 PM
What in the BLAZES are you talking about?

Open a Pic, goto Image--> Mode--> Decompose

There are a ton of options there.
  • RGB
  • RGBA
  • HSV
  • CMY
  • CMYK
  • Alpha
  • LAB
  • YCbCr_ITU_R470
  • YCbCr_ITU_R709
  • YCbCr_ITU_R470_256
  • YCbCr_ITU_R709_256


AND you can Decompose to Layers or Not.



IOW, if you haven't actually looked for CMYK support in GIMP for sometime... You should probably do so again.

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Pain relief

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 28, 2006 05:48 PM
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  [URL=http://lowerbackpain.0pi.com/backpain.htm] Back Pain [/URL]

  [URL=http://painreliefproduct.guildspace.com] Pain relief [/URL]
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[URL=http://nervepainrelief.jeeran.com/painrelief<nobr>.<wbr></nobr> htm] Nerve pain relief [/URL]

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Open Office maybe not the best for pagination

Posted by: rgm on May 08, 2006 07:50 AM
The PDF output for Bicicrazia sometimes has page breaks after just a line or two of a block quote, not ideal pagination from Open Office there. Too bad LyX didn't work out.

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Video Editing

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 08, 2006 02:48 PM
Hi,

If you are interested in video editing on Linux, you might want to check out my editor at:
<a href="http://openmovieeditor.sourceforge.net/" title="sourceforge.net">http://openmovieeditor.sourceforge.net/</a sourceforge.net>

It's in a rather early stage of development, but progressing quickly, and any kind of feedback and suggestions from users are very welcome.

-Richard

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troff still used for books today.

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on May 08, 2006 04:26 PM
Many books have been published using troff. And they are still being done today using GNU groff's implementation. See <a href="http://troff.org/pubs.html#vpnsi" title="troff.org">http://troff.org/pubs.html#vpnsi</a troff.org> for just one example of many at the <a href="http://troff.org/" title="troff.org">http://troff.org/</a troff.org> site.

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