Rufus T. Firefly wrote:Tom Dempsey wrote:Having never been there Martin, I've always wondered how many copies of the book are required to be bound and distributed?
Dissertation? Depends on the University and what Department, etc and then numbers of folks on your committee, and how many copies for the various libraries and abstracting services - somewhere between 5-12 bound copies back when I did it.......for both degrees.
Back when it was typed by hand,

and back when there was a little old lady in the 3rd or 4th basement who checked the margins and formatting of every page with a ruler and could reject any page. At the time, we all wondered whether these little old ladies that did this for just about every University were clones or related in some way.....
Oh God, that was funny and brought back some memories. I think I had the first Masters thesis at my university that was written on the computer and text formatted (this is before WYSWYG (What You See is What You Get) word processors existed). It was so long ago that I forget the name of the program I used (ran on a DECsystem-10). I had to get special permission to use the computer to print it. Then I had to find / order a box of special 20 lb. bond paper with removal side perforations to run it through a dot matrix printer (Digital Equipment Corporation LA-120s).
I remember getting the keys to the terminal room in the CS building one night and running 3 LA-120s simultaneously. Of course first I had to make sure they all had new ribbons. I removed the perforations, tore them into separate pages, collated them, and bound the 9 copies.
And then I had to submit the copies to the Department of Redundancy Department where some guy (related that little old lady, no doubt

) checked the margins with a ruler to see if I passed.
Seems like a million years ago.
George