On Fri, 2003-01-31 at 00:45, Rob Speer wrote: > The only problem I see is that your audience will probably be limited > to > those who already are skilled in Lojban - those who are marginally > interested in the language probably won't be persuaded to learn more > by > a cryptography book. Generally, I'd agree, but OTOH, I'd have to say that I'd be interested in reading it, and I have practically no lojban skills. (I'm working on it, but it's turning out to be a slow process.) So a book like this would be great, for me at least, since it's on an interesting subject, and would require me to expand my lojban knowledge while reading it. And, even better, it would give me a foundation for other technical writing, like mathematical formulas, scientific papers, etc. which I am bound to want to write someday (in lojban). Learn 2 skills at once! Perfect! I'm probably the exceptional oddball, though, that likes languages AND crypto. Perhaps there are more like me... :-) -- Aaron Unger -- Prejudice: A vagrant opinion without visible means of support. -- Ambrose Bierce .
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part