>>Everyone has facilities to read plain text and html. BTW... if you write the docs, I can do the html. I know people always say "it's not big deal because html is so basic". But I took a course on it and there *are* hints that make a page load faster (and other important things). There are tecniques that most people don't know about and aren't obvious or "common sense". I created a web page of my sister's wedding and (one) of the comments I got (a lot) was "the thing loads so fast". <OT> I'm not familiar with the O'Reilly book that Dave mentioned, but I was so impressed with "HTML For The World Wide Web" (Elizabeth Castro) that I showed it to a couple of the students in the Web Site Management class and they ditched the book the instructors gave us. It is the best manual in *any* topic I've ever had. It is truely a "reference manual" in the actual spirit of the idea of a reference manual. Once you read it, you can *actually* go to the page on a particual part and never have to cross reference another page. BTW... It's a book on HTML 4.0. There's probly many more advanced meathods of creating a page now. But I prefer HTML 4.0 because it's basic and all browers understand it. Some browers are old or just haven't caught up with the newer meathods. </OT> Rocco