Publishing / FTX / FAQ / $20 |
FTX FAQ: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions FTX is a text-based publishing format for making web pages on LUGNET. Pages can contain text, lists, images, hyperlinks, and more. For detailed information, please see the FTX User Guide. 1. Can I store my pictures on LUGNET? Not currently. The associated costs are relatively high, but falling. Users are encouraged to make use of the many free image-hosting services on the Internet, most notably Kevin Lochs BrickShelf.com Gallery for LEGO enthusiasts. Since your images will still appear to be on LUGNET as they load into your member pages, you should always make sure that you have permission to make direct embedded links to any images that you include. 2. What about copyrights and disclaimers and stuff? To some extent, these are taken care of for you automatically. LUGNET shows a general legal disclaimer and copyright notice at the bottom of every page you create. (This does not necessarily protect you from liability of copyright infringement, however; you still need to act responsibly.) If you own an image or a body of text, or if it is in the public domain (meaning that it is not copyrighted), then of course you may use it. If not, always obtain permission from the copyright owner prior to using something which you do not own. An exception is linking to web pages on LUGNET: You may freely link to any web page on LUGNET, including other members pages, even if you do not first obtain permission. You may also transclude (include copies of) other members pages into your own pages using the special FTX page-transclusion feature. When you do this, their name will also appear at the bottom of your page showing that you have included content owned by someone else. A viewer is also able to jump directly to any transcluded page, making it effectively impossible to steal content from others without giving them credit. 3. Does LUGNET own the stuff I put up? Unless you specifically transfer copyright ownership: No, it does not. When you create personal pages on LUGNET, you retain copyright ownership of the data you input (assuming you own it in the first place). As part of LUGNETs Terms of Use Agreement, you grant LUGNET, among other things, a non-exclusive license to adapt and publish your content on the World Wide Web. Thus, LUGNET does not own your content but is a publisher of it. You are free to use or publish your content (specifically, the data you input) elsewhere or license it to others at your own discretion. Note, however, that the license you grant to LUGNET when you input data is perpetual (meaning forever), irrevocable (meaning that you cant later change your mind and reverse the grant of license), royalty-free (meaning that LUGNET does not pay you for your content), worldwide, and applies to any communications medium. 4. Why wont HTML code work on my page? LUGNET Member pages use a special format called FTX rather than HTML. 5. Why use FTX over HTML? FTX is more streamlined than HTML. A typical block of HTML may contain a mixture of text and many markup tags (<TABLE>, <UL>, <BR>, etc.) and character entities (® © " ™ etc.), while the same block as FTX content would likely show your text with any formatting characters included inline with your copy. That makes FTX more compact and more legible when editing. It is important that everyone in the LUGNET community feel comfortable about creating their own web pages. Many people have no experience in this field. If methods are kept as simple as possible, it is hoped that everyone will become publishers. 6. Can FTX and HTML do the same things? It depends on what you want to do. If you expect only to write paragraphs of text, include hyperlinks, create simple tables, and show a few images, they they are much the same. But FTX wasnt designed to be as general as HTML. FTX is a fast way to write formatted text or hypertext documents. Pages are quick, clean, and consistent. FTX cannot do everything that HTML can do. However, it does have a few new tricks of its own. For example, FTX pages may include copies of whole other FTX pages through a special kind of hyperlink which does not exist in HTML. 7. Have you considered offering a restricted subset of HTML for those who are
comfortable with HTML? It may be offered someday. For now though, we wish to give this simpler system a complete test. 8. What about tables? And colors? Simple two-dimensional tables are possible in FTX (See the User Guide page for more details). Complex layouts or nested tables are not available in FTX code, although a future version of FTX may include stronger table support. Were also thinking about how to handle colors. 9. Are there any size limits? Currently, for practical reasons relating to HTML forms, a single page is limited to 65,000 text characters of FTX code. However, you can create larger overall pages using the page transclusion feature, which imposes no limits on the sizes of composite pages. There is currently no system-enforced limit on the number of FTX pages that you are allowed to create. 10. Can a friend and I work on a page together? Currently, no. However, it is technically possible. We may enable you to open some of your pages to editing by others. You would have control over which pages and who you would allow editing access. 11. Can I sell stuff through my pages? If:
However, even if the answer is Yes, you still mustnt ever spam anyone via email or post messages about your sales to discussion groups excessively. That is, a few messages to discussion groups are OK (so long as the groups permit this in their charters), but an excessive level is not. (Youll probably find out quickly if you annoy someone.) Sending direct email solicitations to anyone regarding pages you create is also a big no no. 12. Do the initials FTX stand for anything? FTX is short for formatted text (or, if you prefer, fancy text or Fibblesnork text). (By the way, HTML is short for hypertext markup language.) |
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