Local comments on the ruling yesterday

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Author: MikeSheldonmsheldon@desertraven.com
Date:  
Subject: Local comments on the ruling yesterday
Yup, Ventura is still a good product.

Since Corel now owns Ventura, what's the odds they would port it to Linux? A
Linux port might be the foothold it needs to regain marketshare from
PageMaker and Quark.

Michael J. Sheldon
Internet Applications Developer
Phone: 480.699.1084
http://www.desertraven.com/
PGP Key Available on Request

-----Original Message-----
From:
[mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us]On Behalf Of Shawn
T. Rutledge
Sent: Tuesday, April 04, 2000 17:00
To:
Subject: Re: Local comments on the ruling yesterday


On Tue, Apr 04, 2000 at 04:46:14PM -0700, Mike Sheldon wrote:
> I don't see how MS had anything to do with Ventura Publisher's

difficulties,
> since MS STILL doesn't have a competing product in that market (High-end
> document publishing software). Ventura's difficulties can be squarely

placed
> on mishandling by it's owners. (I was a Ventura user once)


True enough. VP was the first real DTP app I got my paws onto back in
the DOS days (1990ish). It was slick and fast and I loved it, on my
XT with its monochrome graphics display. Even supported my 24-pin printer
so that I could get near laser-quality output. I did a couple of fairly
technical papers in it for a class or two; used AutoCAD to produce
diagrams and VP could import the DXF's. Its philosophy was to leave your
source material (text and pictures) alone, and still let you incorporate
them into your document; so a document consisted of a directory full of the
original source files necessary to compose the finished result. There were
import filters for just about every format known to man. You could still
edit the "embedded" stuff in whatever application created it in the first
place, and the changes were transparent to the final document. It even
had the sort of "document processing" mentality of things like LyX (every
text object had to be tagged with a style which specified what sort of thing
it was, and how it was to be formatted; you were unable to just apply fonts
to text willy-nilly) yet had the kind of powerful page layout that was
possible in PageMaker. It used the GEM GUI framework but didn't require
a whole GEM installation...it just worked. From a 360K diskette too.

Short of an open standard for "embedded" content like OpenDoc (which is
mostly dead these days), the compound document philosophy is IMO still
the best so far.

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