Greetings for a New Year, Richard,

> The task here is to distribute Info manuals in a few platform-independent 
> non-source forms, perhaps Info and HTML. Perhaps PDF files too. That is so 
> much simpler than what Guix has to do that using Guix for this would be a 
> quick and dirty hack.

Indeed, I agree with you here. Though, a special aspect of Guix is that it is 
_both_ and independent GNU/Linux distribution, and a package manager that can 
be hosted on any foreign GNU/Linux distribution whether Debian or Trisquel.

That said, the problem here is that distributing the manuals through Guix now 
limits them to users of Guix (package manager and distribution). And that is 
not what we want, the manuals should be distributed so that anyone can have 
them regardless of which distribution they use.

> The task here can be done with something much simpler, and if we
decide to do it, writing a clean solution won't take very long. And it will be 
simpler to understand than Guix.

I agree it would be simpler than installing and learning Guix, but can you hint 
at what such a solution might look like? Manuals are usually distributed as 
packages, and package management of most (Guix is an exception) GNU/Linux 
distributions is painfully isolated and idiosyncratic to the particular system.

Can we create a single repository containing all of the manuals, which then 
acts as the main source from which all GNU/Linux distributions can fetch and 
update?

I believe the construction of a system to _manage_ such manuals is relatively 
much simple, but it is the distribution that I'm afraid would be complicated.

Regards,
Divya Ranjan, Mathematics, Philosophy and Libre Software

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