Speck (printing)
Speck (figuratively for German speck or bacon) in the German typesetting tradition describes a manuscript that is printed with low effort. The term is still used in electronic publishing.
Background
The usage is related to printing paid for as piece work. Manuscripts with a low amount of text, high amount of pictures, free space or halftitles and preset sections were described with the term. They were more easily finished, but allowed the typesetter to earn the same amount as complicated pages with a large amount of new letters. (Compare potboiler for authors.) A typesetter who fobbed off complicated manuscripts on others and preferred "Speck" was called a Speckjäger (Speck hunter).[1]
gollark: Eh, I still need phone calls/SMS and to be honest the screens on tablets are a bit big.
gollark: Or also emulate Android apps on it, but oh potatOS the resource waste.
gollark: Or, well, use it on my laptop.
gollark: I can just not use Discord. Problem solved!
gollark: Anyway, the battery life will be *great* if I can cut down basically every pointless background service and have a GNU/Linux-running phone which basically just runs a browser and basic phone-network functionality.
References
- Alexander Waldow: Illustrierte Encyklopädie der graphischen Künste und der verwandten Zweige. Saur, (Leipzig 1884) reprint Munich 1993, ISBN 3-598-07250-3
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