\glsterm{tex} (and subsequently \LaTeX) originally created \glspl*{dvi} instead of PDF files.\footnote{There was no PDF back then.} However, although there are free DVI viewers, not many people have them installed, so it's really only \TeX\ users who can read them. Also, you can't embed image files in a DVI file or have fancy effects, such as rotation. Instead, people can use \TeX\slash \LaTeX\ to create a DVI file and then use an application to convert the DVI file to PostScript. These days PDF is the preferred platform-independent format, and with the advent of PDF\TeX, modern \TeX\slash \LaTeX\ users can directly create PDF documents rather than going through the DVI route. Some people still prefer to create DVI files as an intermediate step, particularly if they want to embed PostScript instructions (as is done by the \isty{pstricks} package). For simplicity, this book assumes that you have a modern \TeX\ distribution and are using PDF\LaTeX\ rather than \LaTeX\TO DVI.