With the announcement of IIjEX 3.0, Don Knuth acknowledged the need of the (ever growing) w community for an even better system. But at the same time, he made it clear, that he will not get involved in any further enhancements that would change The Wbook. TEX started out originally as a system designed to typeset its author's own publications. In the meantime it serves hundreds of thousands of users. Now it is time, after ten years' experience, to step back and consider whether or not rn 3.0 is an adequate answer to the typesetting requirements of the nineties. Output produced by w has higher standards than output generated automatically by most other typesetting systems. Therefore, in this paper we will focus on the quality standards set by typographers for hand-typeset documents and ask to what extent they are achieved by rn. Limitations of m's algorithms are analyzed; and missing features as well as new concepts are outlined.
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