NanoRaptor, to random
@NanoRaptor@bitbang.social avatar

Apple IIe limitless future poster, with a lovely cleaned up scan based on an archive.org brochure.

Original brochure at https://archive.org/details/AppleIieBrochureA2f2201/page/n3/mode/2up

RL_Dane,
@RL_Dane@fosstodon.org avatar

@royal @NanoRaptor

really helped the Mac thrive in the early 90s.

I'm remembering a mid-90s article talking about the difficulty of doing all-digital layout at the time -- their photos were something like 20MB per page!

ronanmcd, to GraphicDesign
@ronanmcd@mastodon.green avatar
hankg, to art

Scribus, the free and open source page layout application (think Adobe InDesign) just had a big new release. I'd love to hear some real world usage stories by graphic arts/desktop publishing professionals that use Scribus on a regular basis. My time in that industry was so long ago QuarkXPress was the most popular page layout platform.

#GraphicsArts #art #printing #DesktopPublishing #Scribus

scribus.net/scribus-1-6-0-rele…

bluoltremauri, to opensource Italian

La prima notizia importante di questo 2024 è il rilascio (finalmente) dell'ultima versione stabile di Scribus, che inaugura il ramo 1.6. Il progetto è importante perché ritengo sia uno dei software più completi da usare in ambito didattico per insegnare editoria e uno strumento robusto per chiunque avesse necessità di produrre impaginati anche abbastanza complessi.
Tra le novità più interessanti: il supporto al markdown e a Krita.

https://www.scribus.net/scribus-1-6-0-released/

#Scribus #DesktopPublishing #OpenSource

yawning_angel, to amiga

My new video is out! 😱

Installing PageSetter 2 on an Amiga running WB 3.2, from floppy disk. Can it be done?! 🤔

https://youtu.be/wb9JrMSx6Ys

jake4480, (edited ) to tech
@jake4480@c.im avatar

Wow, (over) 30 years of the PDF. I use them daily. From the linked article:

"The concept of PDF - Portable Document Format - actually began with the Camelot Project in 1990. And Camelot itself would be nothing without the very backbone of the idea, PostScript, which started all the way back in 1985, and kickstarted the desktop publishing software revolution.

Back in those days, cross-platform compatibility was a nightmare, which led Dr. John Warnock, co-founder of Adobe, to initiate that project. Its goal was simple in its concept but ambitious in its execution: create a format that would enable anyone to send any document electronically to anyone else, and that person would be able to read and even print it with its formatting perfectly preserved.

...to us jaded computer users nearly at the end of the first quarter of the 21st century, this may sound like nothing to be excited about, but back in the 80s and 90s, which was the personal computer’s infancy, this was a big deal.

...back then, you couldn’t be sure which software someone would be using. You wouldn’t even know which fonts were installed on their machine. If you used one that wasn’t in that other computer’s repertoire, it could at best mess up your document’s formatting. To make matters worse, there was the Mac/Windows divide which was often viewed as a deal-breaker. Many remained convinced a file created on one type of computer could not be opened on another."

https://www.techradar.com/features/30-years-of-pdf-the-file-that-changed-the-world

#PDF #PDFs #TechHistory #1980s #1990s #Adobe #fonts #DesktopPublishing #Apple #Windows #tech #history #publishing

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