HTML 4 For Dummies®: Quick Reference, 2nd EditionISBN: 978-0-7645-0721-2
Spiral-bound paperback
240 pages
August 2000
This title is out-of-print and not currently available for purchase from this site.
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Just a word about us so that you know who the "we" is that
we refer to throughout this book. We are Deborah and Eric
Ray, owners of RayComm, Inc., a technical communication
consulting company. For the most part, we write computer books,
including Dummies 101: HTML and Netscape Composer For
Dummies, to name a couple. In fact (if you can pardon a little
bragging), HTML For Dummies Quick Reference (this book's 1st
edition) and Dummies 101: HTML won international awards at
the 1997 Society for Technical Communication Technical Publications
Competition. And, when we're not trapped under mounds of book
drafts, we also give occasional seminars on HTML and
Internet-related topics, and we take on other
techno-jargon-ese-into-English translation projects. I, Deborah Ray
(my friends call me Deb), have been a technical communicator for
the past seven years and, among other projects, work on developing
The Official TECHWR-L Web site the Web site supporting the
technical communication community. I taught technical writing to
students at Utah State University and Oklahoma State University. I
also have a variety of technical experiences, including creating
various computer and engineering documents for sundry purposes. My
areas of emphasis include writing, designing, and illustrating
documents to meet various audiences' information needs. I, Eric Ray
(my friends call me, well, Eric), have been involved with the
Internet for eight years and have made numerous presentations and
written several papers about HTML and online information. (I like
to hear myself write.) My technical experience includes creating
and maintaining the TECHWR-L listserv list (the oldest and largest
discussion forum for technical communicators) as well as
implementing and running Internet servers. I guess you'd say that
I'm a Webmaster. As a technical communicator, I focus on making
"techie" information easy for normal people to understand. Thanks
to our combined skills, we've reached stereotypical geek status,
having side-by-side home computer workstations at which we work
hours and hours every day. Our cats perch on the monitors, stare at
us, and attempt to supervise our work. (Actually, we think they're
just keeping their tummies warm.)