Revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics
In 1979 the Computing Science Research Center (‘Center 127’) at Bell Laboratories bought a Linotron 202 typesetter from the Mergenthaler company. This was a ‘third generation’ digital machine that used a CRT to image characters onto photographic paper. The intent was to use existing Linotype font...
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| Format: | Conference or Workshop Item |
| Published: |
2013
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| Online Access: | https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28165/ |
| _version_ | 1848793518990950400 |
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| author | Bagley, Steven R. Brailsford, David F. Kernighan, Brian W. |
| author_facet | Bagley, Steven R. Brailsford, David F. Kernighan, Brian W. |
| author_sort | Bagley, Steven R. |
| building | Nottingham Research Data Repository |
| collection | Online Access |
| description | In 1979 the Computing Science Research Center (‘Center 127’) at Bell Laboratories bought a Linotron 202 typesetter from the Mergenthaler company. This was a ‘third generation’ digital machine that used a CRT to image characters onto photographic paper.
The intent was to use existing Linotype fonts and also to develop new ones to exploit the 202’s line-drawing capabilities. Use of the 202 was hindered by Mergenthaler’s refusal to reveal the inner structure and encoding mechanisms of the font files. The particular 202 was further dogged by extreme hardware and software unreliability.
A memorandum describing the experience was written in early 1980 but was deemed to be too “sensitive” to release. The original troff input for the memorandum exists and now, more than 30 years later, the memorandum can be released. However, the only available record of its visual appearance was a poor-quality scanned photocopy of the original printed version.
This paper details our efforts in rebuilding a faithful retypeset replica of the original memorandum, given that the Linotron 202 disappeared long ago, and that this episode at Bell Labs occurred 5 years before the dawn of PostScript (and later PDF) as de facto standards for digital document preservation.
The paper concludes with some lessons for digital archiving policy drawn from this rebuilding exercise. |
| first_indexed | 2025-11-14T19:01:35Z |
| format | Conference or Workshop Item |
| id | nottingham-28165 |
| institution | University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus |
| institution_category | Local University |
| last_indexed | 2025-11-14T19:01:35Z |
| publishDate | 2013 |
| recordtype | eprints |
| repository_type | Digital Repository |
| spelling | nottingham-281652020-05-04T20:18:46Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28165/ Revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics Bagley, Steven R. Brailsford, David F. Kernighan, Brian W. In 1979 the Computing Science Research Center (‘Center 127’) at Bell Laboratories bought a Linotron 202 typesetter from the Mergenthaler company. This was a ‘third generation’ digital machine that used a CRT to image characters onto photographic paper. The intent was to use existing Linotype fonts and also to develop new ones to exploit the 202’s line-drawing capabilities. Use of the 202 was hindered by Mergenthaler’s refusal to reveal the inner structure and encoding mechanisms of the font files. The particular 202 was further dogged by extreme hardware and software unreliability. A memorandum describing the experience was written in early 1980 but was deemed to be too “sensitive” to release. The original troff input for the memorandum exists and now, more than 30 years later, the memorandum can be released. However, the only available record of its visual appearance was a poor-quality scanned photocopy of the original printed version. This paper details our efforts in rebuilding a faithful retypeset replica of the original memorandum, given that the Linotron 202 disappeared long ago, and that this episode at Bell Labs occurred 5 years before the dawn of PostScript (and later PDF) as de facto standards for digital document preservation. The paper concludes with some lessons for digital archiving policy drawn from this rebuilding exercise. 2013-09 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed Bagley, Steven R., Brailsford, David F. and Kernighan, Brian W. (2013) Revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics. In: ACM Symposium on Document Engineering (DocEng '13), 10-13 Sept 2013, Florence, Italy. Digital restoration reverse engineering archiving troff PostScript fonts chess fonts Linotron 202 http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2494266.2494275 |
| spellingShingle | Digital restoration reverse engineering archiving troff PostScript fonts chess fonts Linotron 202 Bagley, Steven R. Brailsford, David F. Kernighan, Brian W. Revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics |
| title | Revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics |
| title_full | Revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics |
| title_fullStr | Revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics |
| title_full_unstemmed | Revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics |
| title_short | Revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics |
| title_sort | revisiting a summer vacation: digital restoration and typesetter forensics |
| topic | Digital restoration reverse engineering archiving troff PostScript fonts chess fonts Linotron 202 |
| url | https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28165/ https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28165/ |