On Mon, 18 Jul 2005 12:04:57 +0100, <netkat at comcast.net> wrote: > "DTP" may be more familiar to some people, but > speaking as an Art Director, I can tell you that > it isn't a term looked upon favorably by > designers. It's placed in the category something > done by tourists, wankers, hobbyists and > dabblers. My suggestion of different wording is > not to confuse people accustomed to one term, but > rather to INclude an entire profession by > offering more accurate descriptive words of what > Scribus is. >
I thought I would look at the debian package info, below are the first three paragraphs. Note that the terms page layout and DTP are both used. I think you are right though, DTP was a nineties buzz word, page layout is a professional activity. Scribus is a desktop page layout program for GNU/Linux similar to Corel Ventura(R), Quark Xpress(R), Adobe PageMaker(R) and InDesign(R). . Scribus can be used for many tasks; from brochure design to newspapers, magazines, newsletters and posters to technical documentation. It has sophisticated page layout features like precision placing and rotating of text and/or images on a page, manual kerning of type, bezier curves polygons, precision placement of objects, layering with RGB and CMYK custom colors. The Scribus document file format is XML-based. Unlike proprietary binary file formats, even damaged documents, can be recovered with a simple text editor. . Scribus supports professional DTP features, such as CMYK color and a color management system to soft proof images for high quality color printing, flexible PDF creation options, Encapsulated PostScript import/export and creation of 4 color separations, import of EPS/PS and SVG as native vector graphics, Unicode text including right to left scripts such as Arabic and Hebrew via freetype. Graphic formats which can be placed in Scribus as images include PDF, Encapsulated Post Script (eps), TIFF, JPEG, PNG and XPixMap(xpm), and any bitmap type supported by QT3. -- -- Ben Green
