T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
498.1 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Mon May 11 1987 14:50 | 5 |
| Steve, read note 447 for a review of Prowrite. Basically, version
1.0 was so bug-ridden as to be virtually useless. I have not yet
received my free upgrade to 1.0, even though it is allegedly shipping.
Time for another nasty phone call, I guess..
|
498.2 | PageSetter | HYSTER::DEARBORN | Trouvez Mieux | Mon May 11 1987 17:04 | 33 |
| I have had Page Setter for a while. It isn't bad. There are a
few drawbacks though. Transfering graphics from IFF to page doesn't
always give good results. I have a hard time gauging the size of
the graphic output. The built in text editor is rather limited
too. The biggest drawback of it (as far as I know...if someone
knows how to do this, please let me know) is this: If you load
a large document into the text editor, you can't pull out sections
of it to be sent to the page. The only way to do this is to cut
everything you don't want. So let's say I have a large document
with several headers in it. If I want to change the headers to
a larger font size, they have to be separated from the rest of the
document BEFORE they are brought into PageSetter. Otherwise, the
only reformating you could do would be boldface, underline, italic
and/or outline, but not a size change.
This is a pain. It means that you have to save all those headers
as separate files, separate from the blocks of text...which have
to be saved separately too.
If you create a special format for a page, you can't carry the settings
over to another page. You have to recreate it over, and over, and
over. This is time consuming.
I recommend using it with fonts other than the system ones. The
Zuma fonts seem to work quite well, providing a variety of point
sizes and typefaces.
Output to a dot matrix printer isn't bad. I haven't seen the laser
version yet. Care to comment on what you saw?
Randy
|
498.3 | Laser Page | ELWOOD::PETERS | | Mon May 11 1987 18:24 | 15 |
|
Gold Disk Has come out with an Post Script laser printer driver
to be used with Page Setter. For about $45 you get a disk with two
utilities and a number of laser printer fonts. One utility lets
you modify a Page Setter page ( i.e. select fonts, set page size).
and then print it. The other utility allows you to make Post Script fonts.
The way it works is that you use Page Setter to make the document.
you then use Laser Page to modify it and print it. Laser Page will
let you send the Post Script directly to a printer ( directly to
physical port, no driver ) or make a disk file containing Post Script.
Steve
|
498.4 | LPS40 | AUTHOR::MACDONALD | WA1OMM Listening 224.28 | Mon May 11 1987 23:46 | 4 |
| Which means ...
You can compile a Pagesetter file for direct printing onto an LPS40
or any other DEC laser printer that supports Post Script. Neat!
|
498.5 | | PLDVAX::SMCAFEE | Steve McAfee | Tue May 12 1987 13:01 | 3 |
|
Could someone list the DEC lasar printers that support postscript?
|
498.6 | | ELWOOD::PETERS | | Tue May 12 1987 19:23 | 8 |
|
The LPS40 supports Postscript and a read a sales update about
a LN03 Super Plus that will support postscript. No others.
Steve
|
498.7 | DEC PostScript printers | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed May 13 1987 08:47 | 11 |
| The LPS40 supports PostScript, but it does not interface using a
serial line, so you need a VAX to reach it from an Amiga. The LN03R
(Scriptpointer) was recently announced (or is about to be announced).
It is just like the Apple Laserwriter: it uses a serial line.
The LPS40 is 40 pages per minute. The LN03R is 8 pages per minute,
maximum throughput. The LPS40 can actually reach 40 pages per minute
with a non-trivial PostScript stream, due to using a MicroVAX as
the PostScript engine and having a lot of buffering. The LN03R
generally runs a lot slower than 8 pages per minute.
John Sauter
|
498.8 | | TIGER::SMCAFEE | Steve McAfee | Wed May 13 1987 17:26 | 11 |
|
I don't intend to buy a postscript LASER printer I was just interested
in finding out if I have access to one here at work. Uploading
binaries is a breeze with DW's VT100. Sounds like an LN03 or LN03+
can't do the job though. We do have some MACs with the appropriate
printers but no one has come up with the capability to write a MAC
disk (yet).
regards,
steve mcafee
|
498.9 | LN03-PLUS should be possible | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed May 13 1987 17:41 | 3 |
| It should be possible to write an Amiga printer driver for the
LN03-PLUS. It is a 300 dpi graphics printer, monochrome only.
John Sauter
|
498.10 | Splitting up a big file | GENRAL::WISHART | | Thu May 14 1987 11:01 | 9 |
| About splitting up a large file: If you create several boxes and
link them together, then bring the file into the first box, it will
"flow" into the other following boxes, filling them too. Then you
can adjust the size of the boxes to get the portion of the text
that you want to format differently in a box by itself. Then unlink
that box from the rest. You can now do whatever you want with the
stuff in that box without affecting the rest of the file. This is
how I've done it.
|
498.11 | | HYSTER::DEARBORN | Trouvez Mieux | Thu May 14 1987 11:59 | 8 |
| clever...but still a pain in the neck.
I just did a large multipage document with this package. Other
than some odd formatting quirks, it worked quite well. It also
works quite fast. Change the size of the type in one linked box
and all the others shift their copy almost instantaneously. Not
bad.
|
498.12 | Vizawrite? | HOUSE::FRACTAL | | Fri May 15 1987 00:35 | 6 |
|
Has anybody had any experience with Vizawrite? It's supposed to
be the link between publishing and processing...
Anybody?
|
498.13 | DOWNLOADING TO THE APPLE | AUNTB::PRESSLEY | | Mon Oct 05 1987 20:43 | 4 |
| If I buy LASER SCRIPT can I produce a POSTSCRIPT file from PAGESETTER
and download it to an APPLE MAC and then print it to the APPLE LASER
PRINTER?
|
498.14 | | ELWOOD::PETERS | | Tue Oct 06 1987 09:57 | 11 |
|
RE .13
Yes, if you get LASER SCRIPT you can send the output to a APPLE
LASER PRINTER. I have LASER SCRIPT and often send my output to a
VAX and then to a LPS40 postscript printer.
Steve Peters
|
498.15 | in the [industry] news | CANAM::SULLIVAN | The angels wanna wear my red shoes | Sun Nov 01 1987 22:37 | 39 |
| At last - Commodore speaks up in a typesetters' industry news source.
TYPEWORLD "the first and only newspaper for electronic publishing" first
[of two, presumably] October 1987 issue, vol. XI #19. A typically
press-release-like article, dateline Santa Clara:
"Commodore Business Machines Inc. and twelve of its key developers are
unveiling an affordable multi-station Amiga-based desktop presentation and
publication system." The article talks about presentation videos with the
Genlock and Video-Titler from Aegis or Deluxe Productions from Electronic
Arts; DigiView from NewTek for capturing images; Impact from Liquid Light
Inc, an adaptor kit to link the Amiga with the Polaroid Palette Film
Recorder [to Polaroid or slide formats]; and Easyl by Anakin Research inc.,
a pressure-sensitive tablet for artists used to conventional drawing.
Then the point where I bring out the salt-shaker [tho I'm confident that by
the time I have a laser printer, some of these items will be as
professional as Pagemaker and Ventura]: "The Amiga is also supported by
several major desktop publishing developers." Professional Page by Gold
Disk [it's got to be better than PageSetter!], Shakespeare by Infinity
Software, City Desk by MicroSearch, Publisher 1000 from Brown-Waugh... and
then WordPerfect and TeX as designed by N-Squared Computer Consultants.
"The TeX/Amiga combination is the workstation of choice in the physics
laboratory at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Laboratory." [Just for
preparing text, where TeX's fame at equations shines, or do they use Amigas
for more purposes, I wonder?]
And finally the article mentions Ameristar Technologies' Arcnet LAN card
that permits several Amigas to share files and a PostScript-compatible
printer; "Ameristar has also developed Amiga network products based on
standard Internet protocols (TCP/IP and UDP/IP) to permit the Amiga's
integration into hybrid mainframe environments."
Let me re-emphasize that the significance of this article is that it's the
first major mention of the Amiga I've seen in material directed at
typesetters - those people whose technical expertise is in the area of
output quality. A lot of them feel threatened by that demon "desk-top
publishing," but many are adapting to this new world by becoming or adding
service bureaus, providing access to PostScript compatible high-res
typesetters, for instance....
|