All. I am anxious to hear what others think but let me share what I believe our next big step in development should be. Right now it is easy to open an XML file and one can even edit the content in the text view. Some important things that one can't do yet are: 1. Start a new document and immediately begin adding content. You can actually enter text into the text view now but it isn't being added in a valid way to the XML and you do not get any braille. We need to finish out the code that creates a new document and adds at least one text element where a user can enter new text, get braille, and save it back to a valid UTD XML document. 2. One cannot yet add braille to an existing document. One of the first things we are going to encounter, and we'll soon know if I'm right, is that users are going to want to add braille-specific information to the document. Transcriber's notes, acknowledgements, braille publication info, and such. 3. Related to the previous point, users are going to want to make corrections to the braille without effecting the print and even make corrections that can't be made in the print. 4. Table of Contents needs to be implemented. For the sake of simplicity and to speed this up I'd like to propose that we use the current LibLouisUTDML way of generating a braille TOC. Users would just move to the place in the document, perhaps in the tree view, and select that as the location of the TOC. A locked braille element would then be added with the braille TOC generated using the headings. I don't think this is going to be 100% reliable in the long term but it might work better than I expect and there's no reason to make it more complicated until we know. Regards, Keith