gzz-commits
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

[Gzz-commits] manuscripts/FutureVision vision.rst


From: Tuomas J. Lukka
Subject: [Gzz-commits] manuscripts/FutureVision vision.rst
Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2003 08:29:43 -0400

CVSROOT:        /cvsroot/gzz
Module name:    manuscripts
Branch:         
Changes by:     Tuomas J. Lukka <address@hidden>        03/09/18 08:29:42

Modified files:
        FutureVision   : vision.rst 

Log message:
        Make refs refs

CVSWeb URLs:
http://savannah.gnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/gzz/manuscripts/FutureVision/vision.rst.diff?tr1=1.87&tr2=1.88&r1=text&r2=text

Patches:
Index: manuscripts/FutureVision/vision.rst
diff -u manuscripts/FutureVision/vision.rst:1.87 
manuscripts/FutureVision/vision.rst:1.88
--- manuscripts/FutureVision/vision.rst:1.87    Thu Sep 18 08:27:53 2003
+++ manuscripts/FutureVision/vision.rst Thu Sep 18 08:29:42 2003
@@ -414,7 +414,7 @@
          are relevant
 
        - structures change in experience 
-         (`Marshall et al. 1993`)
+         (`Marshall et al. 1993`_)
 
     - sessions, though, defined with fixed schemas
 
@@ -426,9 +426,9 @@
 This is a user interface difference, not a structural one.
 
 The VIKI system is able to find structure based on spatial placements 
-of objects (`Marshall and Shipman 1993`, `Marshall et al 1994`_).
+of objects (`Marshall and Shipman 1993`_, `Marshall et al 1994`_).
 
-`Haake et al (1994)` separate the dimensions of "user defines"
+`Haake et al (1994)`_ separate the dimensions of "user defines"
 and "system uses" for how object types are embodied in a system. 
 The item-based systems are delocalized over this graph, just
 as their Dolphin system is: the types are an optional extra.
@@ -440,8 +440,8 @@
 --------------------
 
 The change of the computer system abstractions 
-in Hypermedia operating systems (Nürnberg et al 1996)
-and the subsequent structural computing framework (Nürnberg et al 1997)
+in Hypermedia operating systems (`Nürnberg et al 1996`_)
+and the subsequent structural computing framework (`Nürnberg et al 1997`_)
 are vital for an entirely item-based environment. XXX
 
        




reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]