Journal of Epithelial Biology & Pharmacology
is an Open Access online journal, which publishes Research
articles, Reviews and Letters in the field of all biology
and pharmacology related to epithelial cells, aiming at
providing the most complete and reliable source of information
on current developments in the field.
Manuscripts may be submitted directly to jebp@benthamopen.org.
Each peer-reviewed article that is published in a Bentham
OPEN Journal is universally and freely accessible via
the Internet in an easily readable and printable PDF format.
ONLINE MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION: An online
submission and tracking service via Internet facilitates
a speedy and cost-effective submission of manuscripts1.
The full manuscript has to be submitted using our online
submission service available via FTP at http://www.bentham-ftp.org/open/?jebp
Manuscripts must be submitted by one of the authors of the
manuscript, and should not be submitted by anyone on their
behalf. The principal/corresponding author will be required
to submit a Covering Letter along with the manuscript, on
behalf of all the co-authors (if any). The author(s) will
confirm that the manuscript (or any part of it) has not
been published previously or is not under consideration
for publication elsewhere. In case of submission of the
article on behalf of a consortium, it will be essential
to list all consortium members and affiliations listed after
the Acknowledgments. Furthermore, any illustration, structure
or table that has been published elsewhere must be reported,
and copyright permission for reproduction must be obtained.
For all online submissions, please provide your complete
manuscript in the form of a single zipped folder containing
soft copies of all the materials (main text in MS word format,
figures / illustrations in TIFF, PDF or JPEG, tables in
MS Word, and chemical structures drawn in ChemDraw (CDX)
/ ISISDraw (TGF)) as separate files, while a PDF version
of the entire manuscript must also be included, embedded
with all the figures / illustrations / tables / chemical
structures etc.
It is imperative that before submission, authors should
carefully proofread the files for special characters, mathematical
symbols, Greek letters, equations, tables and images, to
ensure that they appear in proper format.
A successful electronic submission of a manuscript will
be followed by a system-generated acknowledgement to the
principal/corresponding author within 72
hours of the dispatch of the manuscript. Any questions with
regards to the preparation of and submission of your manuscript
to the journal should be addressed to jebp@benthamopen.org
and copied to afshan@benthamscience.org
NOTE: Any queries therein should be addressed
to oa@bentham.org and
copied to Jalil@bentham.org
Manuscript Preparation:
The manuscript should be written in English in a clear,
direct and active style. All pages must be numbered sequentially,
facilitating in the reviewing and editing of the manuscript.
For further convenience, the customer support team available
at Bentham Publication Services (www.benthampublishingservices.com)
can provide assistance to authors for the preparation of
manuscripts.
TeX/LaTeX File Users:
Though Bentham OPEN prefers manuscripts in MS Word
format, users of *TeX/LaTeX processor may
submit the original/source file of their manuscript along
with a camera-ready PDF file in a presentable form (refer
to Sample
File).
Manuscript Length:
Letters: The maximum total page
length for Letter type articles published in the journal
is nine journal pages. Each journal page is on average 900
words.
Research Articles: The minimum total page
length for Research articles is ten journal pages, and the
maximum thirty pages. Each journal page is on average 900
words.
Review Articles: The maximum page length limit
for comprehensive Review articles is forty pages. For Mini-Review
articles, the maximum page length is nine journal pages.
Each journal page is on average 900 words.
There is no restriction on the number of figures, tables
or additional files e.g. video clips, animation and datasets,
that can be included with each article online. Authors should
include all relevant supporting data with each article.
Manuscripts Published:
The Journal accepts letters/ short communications, original
research articles, and mini- and full-length review articles
written in English. Supplements and proceedings of conferences
may also be considered for publication.
Supplements: The journal will consider
for publication supplements. A supplement will be a collection
of articles (6 to 10 articles) based on a theme or topic
of great importance to the field. A short summary proposal
for editing a supplement should be submitted to the Editor
at e-mail jebp@benthamopen.org
with a copy to oa@bentham.org
Conference Proceedings: The journal will
consider for publication proceedings of relevant conferences
in the field. Proposals for publishing conference proceedings
should be submitted to the Editor at e-mail jebp@benthamopen.org
with a copy to oa@bentham.org
MANUSCRIPT SECTIONS FOR PAPERS: Manuscripts
for research articles and letters submitted to the respective
journals should be divided into the following sections;
however, there can be an extension in the number of sections
in review articles in accordance with the requirements of
the topic.
Covering letter
Title page
Abstract
Text organization
List of abbreviations (if any)
Conflict of interest (if any)
Acknowledgements (if any)
References
Figures/illustrations (if any)
Chemical structures (if any)
Tables and captions (if any)
Supportive/supplementary material (if any)
COVERING LETTER: For e-mail submission
of a manuscript , it is a mandatory requirement that a covering
letter be also submitted, delineating the scope of your
submitted article, declaring any potential competing interests,
acknowledging contributions from authors and funding agencies,
and certifying that the paper is prepared according to the
‘Instructions for Authors’. All inconsistencies
in the text and in the reference section, and any typographical
errors must be carefully checked and corrected before submission
of the manuscript. The covering letter, however, is not
required for FTP submission of manuscripts to the journal.
Download the
Covering letter
TITLE: The title should be precise and
brief and must not be more than 120 characters. Authors
should avoid the use of non-standard abbreviations. The
title must be written in title case except for articles,
conjunctions and prepositions.
Authors should also provide a short ‘running title’.
ABSTRACT: The abstract should not exceed
250 words for review and research papers and should be limited
to only 150 words for letters, summarizing the essential
features of the article. The use of abbreviations should
be reduced to a minimum and the references should not be
cited in the abstract.
TEXT ORGANIZATION: The main text should
begin on a separate page and should be divided into separate
sections. For Research articles, the preparation of the
main text must be structured into separate sections as Introduction,
Materials and Methodology, Results, Discussion and Conclusion.
For Review and Letter articles, the manuscript should be
divided into title page, abstract and the main text. The
text may be subdivided further according to the areas to
be discussed, which should be followed by the Acknowledgement
(if any) and Reference sections. The review article should
mention any previous important reviews in the field and
contain a comprehensive discussion starting with the general
background of the field. It should then go on to discuss
the salient features of recent developments. The authors
should avoid presenting material which has already been
published in a previous review. The manuscript style must
be uniform throughout the text and 10 pt Times New Roman
font should be used. The full term for an abbreviation should
precede its first appearance in the text unless it is a
standard unit of measurement. The reference numbers should
be given in square brackets in the text. Italics should
be used for Binomial names of organisms (Genus and Species),
for emphasis and for unfamiliar words or phrases. Non-assimilated
words from Latin or other languages should also be italicized
e.g. in vivo, in vitro, per se, et al. etc. Protein
and Nucleic acid sequences may be included and should conform
to International databases. Genomic and Proteomic studies
may be included and should conform to International databases.
It is advisable that the observations be presented and discussed
in brief. Make available all products that they generate
such as protein, DNA, clone, cell or other types of material
that they describe to other investigators in the field who
require them for bona fide purposes. This should
be done with the spirit that the data that are published
can be duplicated and that other ideas can be tested. For
research involving human subjects, authors must name the
committee(s) that approved the experiments in the Materials
and methods section of the paper and include with their
submission a statement to confirm that informed consent
was obtained from all subjects.
MICROARRAY DATA: The authors will be required
to submit the Microarray experiment data to the ArrayExpress
using the MIAMExpress submission tool (ww.ebi.ac.uk/miamexpress),
which will be subjected to reviewing by the curation team
and if accepted, an ArrayExpress accession number would
be assigned for it. The ArrayExpress offers the facility
to maintain the data until the related paper is published.
Microarray data should be made available for reviewers and
editors at the time of manuscript submission in a MIAME-compliant
and widely accessible format. Submission of large raw and/or
analyzed microarray data files as supplementary data to
the journal should be discouraged, which may alternatively
be submitted either to the Gene Expression Omnibus http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/
or ArrayExpress http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress repositories,
thereby obtaining an accession number for the journal and
any necessary passwords, to facilitate the reviewers and
editors of a manuscript to access the data. The submission
of the microarray data to either of these repositories should
be done at or before acceptance of a paper for publication,
with accession number being allotted well before publication.
Nomenclature
The authors are encouraged to use standardized nomenclature
wherever necessary:
• The SI units should be used; if not exclusively,
please provide the SI value in parentheses after each value.
• Species names should be italicized (e.g., Homo
sapiens). The generic name of a species should be given
in full the first time it appears in the text. The author
authority for each species is desirable on its first mention.
Chemical formulae may not be used as abbreviations in the
text.
• Genes, mutations, genotypes, and alleles should
also be indicated in italics but the protein product of
a gene should be in Roman type . Use the recommended name
by consulting the appropriate genetic nomenclature database,
e.g., HUGO for human genes. It is sometimes advisable to
indicate the synonyms for the gene the first time it appears
in the text. Gene prefixes such as those used for oncogenes
or cellular localization should be shown in roman: v-fes,
c-MYC, etc.
• The Recommended International Non-Proprietary Name
(rINN) of drugs should be provided.
• In case of usage of symbols that do not conform
to those that have previously appeared in the literature,
their aliases may be obtained from the approved nomenclature
in the Human Gene Nomenclature Database (Genew) [www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/nomenclature/guidelines.html]
and LocusLink, to allow retrieval of all the information
available for each gene.
Taxonomic nomenclature: The Latin name
and taxonomic authority (e.g. Linnaeus) should be given
for all experimental species. Chemical nomenclature must
conform to the Subject Index of Chemical Abstracts.
Accession Numbers
All appropriate datasets, images, and information should
be deposited in public resources. Please provide the relevant
accession numbers (and version numbers, if appropriate)
and any necessary passwords to enable the reviewers and
editors of a manuscript to access the data.
Providing accession numbers facilitates linking to and from
the established databases and integrates the article with
a broader collection of scientific information, therefore
list all accession numbers should be listed directly after
the Supporting Information section.
All accession numbers for all entities such as genes, proteins,
mutants, diseases, etc., for which there is an entry in
a public database should be included in the manuscript.
Experimental data should be submitted to the appropriate
databases, with a release date corresponding to the date
of publication.
Greek Symbols and Special Characters: Greek
symbols and special characters often undergo formatting
changes and get corrupted or lost during preparation of
manuscript for publication. To ensure that all special characters
used are embedded in the text, these special characters
should be inserted as a symbol but should not be a result
of any format styling (Symbol font face) otherwise
they will be lost during conversion to PDF/XML.2
Authors are encouraged to consult reporting
guidelines. These guidelines provide a set of recommendations
comprising a list of items relevant to their specific research
design. All kinds of measurements should be reported only
in International System of Units (SI).
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS: Abbreviations use
should be restricted to a minimum. All non-standard abbreviations
should be listed in alphabetical order, along with their
expanded form, defining them upon the first use in the text.
Non-standard abbreviations should not be used unless they
appear at least three times in the text. If abbreviations
are used in the text either they should be defined in the
text where first used, or a list of abbreviations can be
provided.
CONFLICT OF INTEREST: Financial contributions
to the work being reported should be clearly acknowledged,
as should any potential conflict of interest.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Please acknowledge anyone
(individual/company/institution) who has contributed to
the study by making substantial contributions to conception,
design, acquisition of data, or analysis and interpretation
of data, or who was involved in drafting the manuscript
or revising it critically for important intellectual content.
Please list the source(s) of funding for the study, for
each author, and for the manuscript preparation in the acknowledgements
section.
REFERENCES: References must be listed
in the numerical system (Vancouver). All references should
be numbered sequentially [in square brackets] in the text
and listed in the same numerical order in the reference
section. The reference numbers must be finalized and the
bibliography must be fully formatted before submission.
See below few examples of references listed in the correct
Vancouver style:
Typical Paper Reference:
[1] Boehm M, Nabel EG. Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2-a
new cardiac regulator. N Engl J Med 2002; 347: 1795-7.
[2] SoRelle R. Long reach of the N-terminal of B-type natriuretic
peptide. Circulation 2002; 106: 9059-63.
Typical Chapter Reference:
[3] Stevenson WG, Friedman PL. In: Hennekens CH, Ed. Clinical
trials in cardiovascular disease. Philadelphia, WB Saunders
Co. 1999; 217-30.
Book Reference:
[4] Carlson BM. Human embryology and developmental biology.
3rd ed. St. Louis: Mosby; 2004.
Edited Book:
[5] Brown AM, Stubbs DW, Eds. Medical physiology. New York:
Wiley; 1983.
Conference Paper:
[6] Anderson JC. Current status of chorion villus biopsy.
In: Tudenhope D, Chenoweth J, Eds. Proceedings of the 4th
congress of the Australian perinatal society; 1986: Brisbane,
Queensland: Australian Perinatal Society; 1987; pp. 190-6.
Conference Proceedings:
[7] Harris AH, Ed. Economics and health: 1997: Proceedings
of the 19th australian conference of health economists;
1997 Sep 13-14; Sydney, Australia. Kensington, N.S.W.: School
of Health Services Management, University of New South Wales;
1998.
Journal Article on the Internet:
[8] Aylin P, Bottle A, Jarman B, Elliott, P. Paediatric
cardiac surgical mortality in England after Bristol: descriptive
analysis of hospital episode statistics 1991-2002. BMJ [serial
on the Internet]. 2004 Oct 9; [cited 2004 October 15]; 329:
[about 10 screens]. Available from: http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/329/7470/825
Book/Monograph on the Internet:
[9] Donaldson MS, Ed. Measuring the quality of health care
[monograph on the internet]. Washington: National Academy
Press; 1999 [cited 2004 Oct 8]. Available from: http://legacy.netlibrary.com/
Web site / Homepage:
[10] HeartCentreOnline [homepage on the Internet]. Boca
Raton, FL: HeartCentreOnline, Inc.; c2000-2004 [updated
2004 May 23; cited 2004 Oct 15]. Available from: http://www.heartcenteronline.com/
Journal with Part / Supplement:
If a journal carries continuous pagination throughout the
volume, then the issue number can be omitted.
Issue with Supplement:
[11] Glauser TA. Integrating clinical trial data into clinical
practice. Neurology 2002; 58(12 Suppl 7): S6-12.
Volume with Part:
[12] Abend SM, Kulish N. The psychoanalytic method from
an epistemological viewpoint. Int J Psychoanal 2002; 83(Pt
2): 491-5.
Issue with Part:
[13] Ahrar K, Madoff DC, Gupta S, Wallace MJ, Price RE,
Wright KC. Development of a large animal model for lung
tumors. J Vasc Interv Radiol 2002; 13(9 Pt 1): 923-8.
Patent:
[14] Pagedas AC, inventor; Ancel Surgical R&D Inc.,
assignee. Flexible endoscopic grasping and cutting device
and positioning tool assembly. United States patent US 20020103498.
2002 Aug.
Some important points to remember:
* All references must be complete and accurate.
* If the number of authors exceeds six then et al
will be used after three names (the term “et al.”
should be in italics).
* Online citations should include the date of access.
* Journal abbreviations should follow the Index Medicus/MEDLINE.
* Take special care of the punctuation convention as described
in the above-mentioned examples.
* Avoid using superscript in the in-text citations and reference
section.
* Abstracts, unpublished data and personal communications
(which can only be included if prior permission has been
obtained) should not be given in the reference section but
they may be mentioned in the text and details provided as
footnotes.
* The authors are encouraged to use a recent version of
EndNote (version 5 and above) or Reference Manager (version
10) when formatting their reference list, as this allows
references to be automatically extracted.
FIGURES / ILLUSTRATIONS: The authors should
provide the illustrations as separate files, as well as
embedded in the text file, numbered consecutively in the
order of their appearance. Each figure should include a
single illustration. No charges will be levied on the use
of color figures except in the reprints. Each figure should
be closely cropped to minimize the amount of white space
surrounding the illustration.
If a figure consists of separate parts, it is important
that a single composite illustration file be submitted,
containing all parts of the figure.
Photographs should be provided with a scale bar if appropriate,
as well as high-resolution component files.
Scaling/Resolution
For Line Art image type, which is generally an image based
on lines and text and does not contain tonal or shaded areas,
the preferred file format is TIFF or EPS, with colour mode
being Monochrome 1-bit or RGB, in a resolution of 900-1200
dpi.
For Halftone image type, which is generally a continuous tone
photograph and contains no text, the preferred file format
is TIFF, with colour mode being or RGB or Grayscale, in a
resolution of 300 dpi.
For Combination image type, which is generally an image containing
halftone in addition to text or line art elements, the preferred
file format is TIFF, with colour mode being or RGB or Grayscale,
in a resolution of 500-900 dpi.
Formats
For illustrations, the following file formats are acceptable:
• Illustrator
• EPS (preferred format for diagrams)
• PDF (also especially suitable for
diagrams)
• PNG (preferred format for photos
or images)
• Microsoft Word (version 5 and above;
figures must be a single page)
• PowerPoint (figures must be a single
page)
• TIFF
• JPEG (conversion should be done
using the original file)
• BMP
• CDX (ChemDraw)
• TGF (ISISDraw)
Bentham OPEN does not process figures submitted
in GIF format.
If the large size of TIFF or EPS figures acts as an obstacle
to online submission, authors may find that conversion to
JPEG format before submission results in significantly reduced
file size and upload time, while retaining acceptable quality.
JPEG is a 'lossy' format, however. In order to maintain
acceptable image quality, it is recommended that JPEG files
are saved at High or Maximum quality.
Files should not be compressed with tools such as Zipit
or Stuffit prior to submission as these tools will in any
case produce negligible file-size savings for JPEGs and
TIFFs, which are already compressed.
Please do not:
1. Supply embedded graphics in your word processor (spreadsheet,
presentation) document;
2. Supply files that are optimized for screen use (like
GIF, BMP, PICT, WPG); the resolution is too low;
3. Supply files that are too low in resolution;
4. Submit graphics that are disproportionately large for
the content.
Segments of computer programs or output are treated like
diagrams and are reproduced from good quality material provided
by author(s) (normal line printer output is not considered
good quality).
Image Conversion Tools
There are many software packages, many of them freeware
or shareware, capable of converting to and from different
graphics formats, including PNG.
Good general tools for image conversion include GraphicConverter
on the Macintosh, PaintShop Pro, for Windows, and ImageMagick,
which is available on Macintosh, Windows and UNIX platforms.
Note that bitmap images (e.g. screenshots) should not be
converted to EPS, since this will result in a much larger
file size than the equivalent JPEG, TIFF, PNG or BMP, with
no increase in the quality. EPS should only be used for
images produced by vector-drawing applications such as Adobe
Illustrator or CorelDraw. Most vector-drawing applications
can be saved in, or exported as, EPS format. In case the
images have been originally prepared in an Office application,
such as Word or PowerPoint, then the original Office files
should be directly uploaded to the site, instead of being
converted to JPEG or another format that may be of low quality.
TABLES:
* Data Tables should be submitted in Microsoft Word table
format.
* Each table should include a title/caption being explanatory
in itself with respect to the details discussed in the table.
Detailed legends may then follow.
* Table number in bold font i.e. Table 1,
should follow a title. The title should be in small case
with the first letter in caps. A full stop should be placed
at the end of the title.
* Tables should be embedded in the text exactly according
to their appropriate placement in the submitted manuscript.
* Columns and rows of data should be made visibly distinct
by ensuring that the borders of each cell are displayed
as black lines.
* Tables should be numbered in Arabic numerals sequentially
in order of their citation in the body of the text.
* If a reference is cited in both the table and text, please
insert a lettered footnote in the table to refer to the
numbered reference in the text.
* Tabular data provided as additional files can be submitted
as an Excel spreadsheet.
SUPPORTIVE/SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: We
strongly encourage to append supportive material, for example
a PowerPoint file containing a talk about the study, a PowerPoint
file containing additional screenshots, a Word, RTF, or
PDF document showing the original instrument(s) used, a
video, or the original data (SAS/SPSS files, Excel files,
Access Db files etc.). Published/reproduced material should
not be included unless you have obtained written permission
from the copyright holder, which should be forwarded to
the Editorial Office in case of acceptance of your article
for publication.
Supportive/Supplementary material intended for publication
must be numbered and referred to in the manuscript. In-text
citations (for example "see PowerPoint Appendix 1")
as well as a section with the heading "Supportive/Supplementary
Material" before the "References" section
should be provided. Here, list all Supportive/Supplementary
Material and include a brief caption line for each file
describing its contents.
Any additional files will be linked into the final published
article in the form supplied by the author, but will not
be displayed within the paper. They will be made available
in exactly the same form as originally provided. Please
also make sure that each additional file is a single table,
figure or movie (please do not upload linked worksheets
or PDF files larger than one sheet). Supportive/Supplementary
material must be provided in a single zipped file.
Authors must clearly indicate if these files are not for
publication but meant for the reviewers'/editors' perusal
only.
PERMISSION FOR REPRODUCTION: Published/reproduced
material should not be included unless you have obtained
written permission from the copyright holder, which should
be forwarded to the Editorial Office in case of acceptance
of your article for publication.
For obtaining permission for reproducing any material published
in a paper by a Bentham Science, please fill in the request
FORM
and send to jebp@benthamopen.org
for consideration.
AUTHORS AND INSTITUTIONAL AFFILIATIONS:
The author will be required to provide their full names,
the institutional affiliations and the location, with an
asterisk in front of the name of the principal/corresponding
author. The corresponding author(s) should be designated
and their complete address, business telephone and fax numbers
and e-mail address must be stated to receive correspondence
and galley proofs.
REVIEWING AND PROMPTNESS OF PUBLICATION:
All manuscripts submitted for publication will be immediately
subjected to peer-reviewing, usually in consultation with
the members of the Editorial Advisory Board and a number
of external referees. Authors may, however, provide in their
Covering Letter the contact details (including e-mail addresses)
of four potential peer reviewers for their paper. Any peer
reviewers suggested should not have recently published with
any of the authors of the submitted manuscript and should
not be members of the same research institution.
All peer-reviewing will be conducted via the Internet to
facilitate rapid reviewing of the submitted manuscripts.
Every possible effort will be made to assess the manuscripts
quickly with the decision being conveyed to the authors
in due course.
LANGUAGE AND EDITING: Manuscripts must
be written in good English in a clear and correct style.
In order to maintain uniformity throughout the text, the
manuscript should be written in either American or British
English. Submitted manuscripts will not be edited for style
or language, and reviewers may advise rejection of a manuscript
if it is compromised by grammatical errors. Non-native speakers
of English may choose to make use of a copyediting and language
editing service such as that provided by Bentham Publication
Service (please contact at email: info@benthampublishingservices.com).
PROOF CORRECTIONS: Authors are required
to proofread the PDF versions of their manuscripts before
submission. To avoid delays in publication, proofs should
be checked immediately for typographical errors and returned
within 48 hours. Major changes are not
acceptable at the proof stage. If unable to send corrections
within 48 hours due to some reason, the
author(s) must at least send an acknowledgement on receiving
the galley proofs or the article will be published exactly
as received and the publishers will not be responsible for
any error occurring in the manuscript in this regard.
The corresponding author will be solely responsible for
ensuring that the revised version of the manuscript incorporating
all the submitted corrections receives the approval of all
the authors of the manuscript.
COPYRIGHT: Authors who publish in Bentham
OPEN Journals retain copyright to their work. Submission
of a manuscript to the respective journals implies that
all authors have read and agreed to the content of the Covering
Letter or the Terms and Conditions (stated to the submitting
author on FTP submission) . It is a condition of publication
that manuscripts submitted to this journal have not been
published and will not be simultaneously submitted or published
elsewhere. Once submitted to the journal, the authors will
not withdraw their manuscript at any stage prior to publication.
Plagiarism is strictly forbidden.
PUBLICATION FEES: The publication fee
details for each article published in the journal are given
below:
Letters: The publication fee for each
published Letter article submitted is $600.
Research Articles: The publication fee
for each published Research article is $800.
Mini-Review Articles: The publication
fee for each published Mini-Review article is $600.
Review Articles: The publication fee for
each published Review article is $900.
Once the paper is accepted for publication, the author will
receive by email an electronic invoice. The fee form is
also available on the Web site at www.bentham.org/open/feeform
Submissions from the Editorial Board Members of the journal
will receive a special discount of 50% on the total publication
fee. Submissions by authors from developing countries will
receive a discount of 30% on the total publication fee charge.
MEMBERSHIP: Join as a member of Bentham
Open today to obtain great discounts on your article publication
fees! For details click here.
REPRINTS: High quality printed reprints
of published articles are available for purchase, if ordered,
with a minimum number of 100 reprints.
1 The submission process
is compatible with version 3.0 or later of Internet Explorer
and Netscape Navigator, and with most other modern web browsers.
It can be used from PC, Mac, or Unix platforms.
2 In this connection, we
recommend the use of Microsoft Word version 2000 and above.