Path: utzoo!utgpu!water!watmath!clyde!att!att-ih!ihnp4!ihlpe!kimes From: kimes@ihlpe.ATT.COM (Kit Kimes) Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st Subject: Re: ST Minix (and DTP) Summary: Atari Announcements Keywords: Atari ST, minix (now USA announcements) Message-ID: <2894@ihlpe.ATT.COM> Date: 28 Apr 88 13:46:01 GMT References: <203@eutrc3.UUCP> <1615@alliant.Alliant.COM> <165@obie.UUCP> Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories - Naperville, Illinois Lines: 54 In article <165@obie.UUCP>, wes@obie.UUCP (Barnacle Wes) writes: > In article <1615@alliant.Alliant.COM>, rosenkra@Alliant.COM (Bill Rosenkranz) writes: > > On the other hand, I do agree about Atari's strategies regarding Europe > and the USA. I don't mind them announcing everything at the Hannover > Fair, as opposed to Comdex or the CES, but to sell everything in > Europe for MONTHS before it comes out here is irritating. Atari doesn't announce everything in Europe. Below is an article that appeared in EE Times (printed without permission) that came out of a desk top publishing show right here in good old Chicago, USA. ATARI ADOPTS IMAGEN POSTSCRIPT SOFTWARE CLONE FOR LASER PRINTER "Desktop publishing for Atari computer users got much easier last week, with Atari's public showing of a PostScript laser printer software clone. The software, dubbed UltraScript, enables Atari's laser printer to produce documents that are formatted and structured in Adobe's PostScript page description language. Insiders say that Adobe normally demands a royalty of about $100 per printer for PostScript licensees. That was too steep for Atari, which markets an under-$2000, 300-dpi laser printer. But because Atari's printer receives its pixel-page generation commands from the 68000-based ST or Mega host, a PostScript-like interpreter can command the printer to act like a PostScript hardware device. That's where Imagen (San Jose, CA) comes in. The QMS subsidiary has long had its own proprietary text and graphical rotation routines. Now, it has developed a fast interpreter which Atari engineers say is actually faster than Adobe's own in many instances. The UltraScript package comes on a single Atari diskette, allowing the computer to perform PostScript-like image on the fly. Normally, PostScript is licensed in ROM form, as pioneered in Apple's Laser- Writer printer three years ago. A RAM-image UltraScript interpreter works for Atari because its laser-printer commands stem from the host computer. That allows Atari--and third-party desktop publishing companies--to exploit PostScript's curve-generation prowess. Third-party desktop publishing was the theme at Atari's Corporate Electronic Publishing Systems booth last week. Several publishers said they intend to offer UltraScript support this summer. Atari will show the UltraScript system at Comdex this spring, and hope to ship the software "at low cost" in mid-summer." Kit Kimes AT&T--Information Systems Labs ...ihnp4!ihlpe!kimes