In the process of trying to open what I thought was an #ancient document (in .tex) - I tripped over a world I was only dimly aware of: It's the answer to the question: *Why do all academic, scientific papers and PDFs have the same look?" And I found my answer: They use something like this instead of Microsoft Word: http://www.lyx.org/ I downloaded this beautiful, 2015 monstrosity: It's not a Word Processor, even though it looks like one at first. It can do stuff I didn't know you could automate on paper or screen. It also exports to HTML and PDF in several different ways, can help you manage bibliographies, references, and all that academic / scientific stuff. And the fonts they use? Wow... they really are beautiful. I get so used to jagged edges (I kinda like jagged edges - I'm always reminded of 80s video games when I'm online) - that I forgot what really smooth type looks like. Anyway, there you go. I can open my ancient document that I snagged from an ftp server that's been in operation since at least 1992 - in the ancient days before the WWW - that contains a 23 year old code that I'm going to try to run in 2015. Why? Because.?