diff --git a/doc/libcdio.texi b/doc/libcdio.texi index 5e0cd6c9..e89e4c65 100644 --- a/doc/libcdio.texi +++ b/doc/libcdio.texi @@ -24,8 +24,8 @@ @ifinfo This file documents GNU CD input and control library -Copyright (C) 2003 Herbert Valerio Riedel @email{} and Rocky -Bernstein @email{} +Copyright (C) 2003, 2004 Herbert Valerio Riedel @email{} +and Rocky Bernstein @email{} Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ development.'' @titlepage @title GNU libcdio library -@subtitle $Id: libcdio.texi,v 1.7 2003/11/11 12:46:20 rocky Exp $ +@subtitle $Id: libcdio.texi,v 1.8 2004/01/29 04:23:38 rocky Exp $ @author Rocky Bernstein et al. @page @@ -219,10 +219,10 @@ Mode2. @end menu @subsection ISO-9660 -Nowhere in the Yellow Book ist specified how data is to be stored on a -CD-ROM. It was feared that different companies would implement -proprietary data storage formats using this specification, resulting -in incompatible data CDs. To prevent this, representatives of major +The Yellow Book doesn't specify how data is to be stored on a CD-ROM. +It was feared that different companies would implement proprietary +data storage formats using this specification, resulting in +incompatible data CDs. To prevent this, representatives of major manufacturers met at the High Sierra Hotel and Casino in Lake Tahoe, NV, in 1985, to define a standard for storing data on CDs. This format was nicknamed High Sierra Format. In a slightly modified form it was