On 2016-07-08 3:19 PM, Liam Proven wrote:
On 8 July 2016 at 20:00, Chuck Guzis <[email protected]> wrote:
On 07/08/2016 10:27 AM, Liam Proven wrote:


Only hardcore IBM customers used DisplayWrite. It had, naturally,
great support for IBM's (rather expensive but very solid) laser
printers, which were slightly competitive and popular around the end
of the 1980s/beginning of the 1990s. Odd spindly fonts, as I recall.

My first employers sold a lot of copies of Ashton-Tate MultiMate, as
it was the only mainstream network-aware WP for DOS LANs -- it
supported both Netware and 3Com 3+Share, which was also popular
around that time. It may have done file locking and network-drive
shared templates, but as you say, proportionally-spaced fonts were a
problem.

What I found surprising about the IBM Displaywriter was that much of the
"smarts" of the thing resided in the printer firmware itself (e.g.
underlining, bolding, etc.) and not the DW CPU unit--and, of course, the
printer used EBCDIC.
Aha. I have never seen an actual DisplayWriter -- note that final "r".

DisplayWrite (no "r" on the end) was a WP package for DOS. I believe
it looked & worked quite like a hardware DisplayWriter, but as I said,
I wouldn't know. I'm quite curious and I'm sorry I missed out on them.

Oddly, at least oddly I was told, quite a few people/companies bought
& used DisplayWrite even if they never had or used a hardware
DisplayWriter. It wasn't very competitive but it was good enough --
the "professional" tier of early DOS wordprocessors were all expensive
and rather arcane.


There was also a version of displaywrite for 370, I am told that the only thing that is really similar is the name of the products. Before displaywriter the OP division of IBM produced the Office system 6 which had a really cool inkjet printer.... as long as you didn't have to fix them service reps called them "Spray and pray" They where not a thermal inkjet like most modern ones, but rather used a pressurized ink system to force the ink through nozzles on the print head, I saw one operating without the shroud around the printhead that sucked back overspray, it was really cool the print head moved along silently and the character just appeared on the page. Print quality was very good. The 6670 laser printer ( a copier 3 with a laser print head) was also originally part of that system they also produced good quality results but often had duplexing issues. later on there was the 5520 system which was really a S/34 running special software and a special version of the 5251 terminals.

The first purpose built wordprocessor I ever saw was a Micom system in a government office around 1980/81. Micom first made wordprocessors based on 8080 around 1975.

Paul.

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