On Mon, Dec 21, 2009 at 2:46 PM, Harald Sundt <[email protected]> wrote:
> Rules I learned by asking about Cross-Platform Font Use - THANK FOLKS!

> • You can't do serious publishing with Open Office or Neo-Office - you need
> Quark or InDesign (you'll get a bunch of Open Type fonts if you buy InDesign
> anyway; I'm not sure about Quark). You can get away with Illustrator and/or
> Photoshop.

I was a typographer for some 20 years before switching careers to
practice law. Never lost my interest. In choosing publishing software,
much depends on  the kind and quality of publications you're aimed at
presenting. Regardless of the software chosen, there's a learning
curve.

Some more alternatives you might check.

-- WordPerfect X4. Much better typesetting quality than OOo or Word,
although still not as powerful for typography as a full blown DTP
system. But comes with an excellent collection of ~ 1,000 high quality
fonts, both in Type I and TTF. Windows only. Can be obtained on eBay
for around $35. More than worth it it for the fonts alone. Generally
makes an excellent text input program for a DTP.

-- Scribus. The premier free DTP for Linux/Unix. Not yet in the class
of Adobe and Quark's high end offerings, but rather startlingly
powerful. <http://www.scribus.net/>. And if you've got  the need for
the high end proprietary offerings, you've got the money to hire 20
people to run the software. Should be in MacPorts and there is a
Windows port as well.

-- LaTeX. Desktop typesetting systems don't come more powerful than
TeX and LaTex is its most popular incarnation.
<http://www.latex-project.org/>. Excellent for  journal articles,
technical reports, books, and slide presentations, particularly
because you can wrestle with the typography at the markup level. Old
and mature. Requires PostScript fonts. Free, supported on
Linux/Unix/OS X/Windows.

 -- The Gimp (Gnu Image Manipulation Program). Professional grade open
source image manipulation tools.  <http://www.gimp.org/>. Free,
supported on Linux/Unix/OS X/Windows.

-- Inkscape. Excellent SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) editor.
<http://www.inkscape.org/>. SVG images are quickly becoming
mission-critical in web publishing because of the mobile device
onslaught and the need to scale images for a wider variety of screen
resolutions and sizes. Free, supported on Linux/Unix/OS X/Windows.

-- ImageMagick. Professional-grade raster (bitmap) image editor.
<http://www.imagemagick.org/>. Notably, can output more than 100
raster formats. Command line tools, but GUIs for them are available.
Free, supported on Linux/Unix/OS X/Windows.

There are still more related open source projects. Bottom line though:
If you want to walk into someone else's shop and work for them, you'll
probably need to be competent with the Adobe or Quark DTP offerings.
But if you are setting up your own shop, I'd take a very hard look at
what the free and open source software community has to offer.

The proprietary software industry depends on forcing you to upgrade
periodically. That's inevitable with revenues derived from license
sales. Adobe and Quark's software is very expensive and not just for
the initial purchase. It's an ongoing expense, not only for the
license acquisition cost but also for the productivity hit in the
learning curve for upgraded versions.

It's been many years since I dropped my partnership in a couple of
print shops and switched careers. But if I were setting up a
typesetting service today, it would take a real show-stopper to
persuade me to go the proprietary software route.

YMMV.

Best regards,

Paul


-- 
Universal Interoperability Council
<http:www.universal-interop-council.org>
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