An easy solution (to me anyway) to the problem of a printed Listowner's Manual is to self-publish the book. I have a binding machine for spiral bindings, and I do the printing on my laserprinter. In addition to being a co-owner of the MADNESS mailing list, I do computer consulting under the name Muscupiabe Software, sell books under the name Muscupiabe Books, and do linguistics work under the name of Indigenous Languages Project. I do a LOT of technical writing (software manuals) -- most of it in English, but for some of my I.L.P. work, I've written technical manuals in Native American (American Indian) languages and in Spanish (Mexico dialect). I do all my printing and binding work here (not too many publishers can print Cherokee, Cree, or Inuit syllabaries). I do printing on a small scale, since I am a small outfit. My costs for everything come out to about 7 cents per page (printed both sides, including paper, toner, machine wear and tear, etc.). If electronic versions of documentation were available, I don't see the problem with printing your own copy. Punch the paper with a three hole punch and put the pages in a 3-ring binder if nothing better is affordable. My self-published books don't look all slick and glossy like the ones at the bookstore do, but they serve the purpose, and my users find them very readable which is the ultimate goal anyway. Most word processor programs have a concordance function, as well as indexing and other good stuff. Your index could include any word or phrase you want it to. (For publishing, I use WordPerfect for Windows 6.0.) My ideal is having both printed documetation AND an electronic file that I can search using software. Chuck Coker [log in to unmask] /\_/\ ((0 0)) +--------------------------oOO---\o/---OOo---------------------------+ | Chuck Coker | | Technical Owner | | MADNESS Mailing List | | | | e-mail: [log in to unmask] voice: (909) 882-2099 | +--------------------------------------------------------------------+