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- POSTGIF version 1.2
- _______
-
- Unless you have a colour PostScript printer, you might have
- observed that the visual splendor of GIF files on your screen is
- rarely matched by anything that you can arrive at on paper.
- Converting colour pictures to black and white by ``dithering''
- them is time consuming and rarely results in really decent
- looking output.
-
- If you have a monochrome PostScript device you can have much more
- attractive black and white output from colour GIF files by
- halftoning your GIF files into black and white images. This will
- present you with printable, screened pictures which will
- reproduce at least as well as a screened photograph. Said images
- can be used as PostScript art in Ventura and other desktop
- publishing system chapters. In addition, they look slick.
-
- POSTGIF is a simple way of converting full colour GIF images of
- almost any size into encapsulated PostScript (EPS) files all set
- to send to your printer or suck into another program. It
- calculates which of two hundred and fifty six shades of grey
- best represents each colour in the palette of a GIF file and emits
- a copy of the file in the EPS format. It's dead easy to use. If
- you have a GIF file called CHEAPSEX.GIF, type
-
- POSTGIF CHEAPSEX
-
- and POSTGIF.EXE will write you a file called CHEAPSEX.EPS. To see
- what this looks like, type
-
- COPY CHEAPSEX.EPS LPT1:
-
- assuming that your PostScript printer is connected to LPT1:.
- After a while, a halftoned representation of your picture should
- rattle out of your printer.
-
- Encapsulated PostScript files created in this way include a
- ``preview'' image built in. If you suck one into Ventura, for
- example, you will see a fairly contrasty bit mapped
- representation of your original GIF file where the PostScript
- file is supposed to be. Slick, this.
-
- If you intend to print the EPS files you create directly to your
- printer... by copying them to LPT1, for example... you should
- disable the creation of the preview image. This is done with the
- /P option... that's P for ``plain'', not P for ``preview''. To
- disable the creation of the preview in the above example, you
- would
-
- POSTGIF CHEAPSEX /P
-
- If you TYPE an EPS file created with POSTGIF, you will see some
- garbage at the from of the file if the preview has been included
- and the line ``%!PS-Adobe-2.0'' first thing if it has not.
-
- These EPS files make great clip art for desktop publishing
- programs such as Ventura, since the results are very much like
- halftoned photographs. However, the default screen which your
- printer uses when you output a POSTGIF'd file may not be the
- ideal one if you intend to use the final results for
- reproduction... that is, if you expect to use 'em as art to be
- run through a printing press. As such, POSTGIF allows you to
- specify the halftone screen size.
-
- If you say
-
- POSTGIF CHEAPSEX /S60
-
- the resulting EPS file will print with a screen of sixty dots per
- inch.
-
- The screen size you use will depend on what you plan to do with
- the EPS files you create. As a rule, everything else being equal,
- eighty line screens are about right for reproduction on
- newsprint, and something between one hundred and twenty to one
- hundred and forty-four lines are about right for repoduction on
- coated... glossy... paper. However, a three hundred dot per inch
- laser printer can't do anything like this. Experiment with
- different screen densities to find one that looks best on your
- printer. If you set the density too high... say eighty to a
- hundred lines on a three hundred dot per inch laser... the
- resulting pictures will get muddy and posterized.
-
- Bloody Little Details
- _____________________
-
- There are several salient points worth mentioning about POSTGIF,
- to wit...
-
- - The EPS files it emits are mildly huge... plan on up to half a
- megabyte for an average size GIF file. If you want to know
- approximately how big the EPS file resulting from a particular
- GIF file will be, use the formula
-
- (image width) * (image depth) * 2 plus a couple of kilobytes
-
- They ARC very well, though.
-
- - You can translate multiple files at once. For example, the
- command
-
- POSTGIF CHEAPSEX CINDY DRAGNLDY BODE1
-
- would translate four GIF files into four EPS files. It would take
- a while, though.
-
- - Non-interlaced GIF files are translated directly. Interlaced
- files are buffered in memory and translated. This being the case,
- an enormous interlaced GIF file might cause POSTGIF to abort with
- a memory allocation error. One rarely sees enormous interlaced
- GIF files, so this shouldn't be a problem. However, keep this in
- mind if you try to run POSTGIF with very little available memory,
- such as in a DOS shell.
-
- - POSTGIF does grey scale summing and interpolation to decide
- what grey shade best represents a particular colour. This usually
- works. However, if all of the colours in your GIF file are of
- rather medium intensities, the resultant black and white image
- might be pretty washed out. There's not much POSTGIF can do about
- this. For example, fifty percent blue and fifty percent red may
- stand out well in a colour image, but they'll both be translated
- into something like fifty percent grey by POSTGIF.
-
- - The EPS files which POSTGIF creates can be scaled, translated,
- rotated, and screened any way you... or your desktop publishing
- package... feel like. You can also edit them by hand to change
- various characteristics about them if you're versant with
- PostScript programming.
-
- - POSTGIF files work will with Freedom of Press. In fact, that's
- what we used to do the initial development of POSTGIF. For those
- who haven't come across it, Freedom of Press is a (large) program
- which runs on an AT or 80386 based PC and interprets PostScript
- files, outputting them to a LaserJet (and several other sorts of
- printers.) It's done by CAI, 5 Technology Centre, 900 Middlesex
- Turnpike, Billerica MA 01821 (508) 667-8585.
-
-
- Moral dogma
- ___________
-
- If you like this program and find it useful, you are requested to
- send $20.00 to Alchemy Mindworks Inc. This will entitle you to
- telephone support, notification of updates and other good things
- like that. More to the point, though, it'll make you feel good.
- We've not infested the program with beg notices, crippled it or
- had it verbally insult you after ten days. We trust you to
- support POSTGIF if you like it.
-
- Oh yes, and if you fail to support this program and continue to
- use it, a leather winged demon of the night will tear itself,
- shrieking blood and fury, from the endless caverns of the nether
- world, hurl itself into the darkness with a thirst for blood on
- its slavering fangs and search the very threads of time for the
- throbbing of your heartbeat. Just thought you'd want to know
- that.
-
- We are
- Alchemy Mindworks Inc.
- P.O. Box 313
- Markham, Ontario
- L3P 3J8
- Canada
-
- Other programs we've done that you might like include:
-
- Scoop - MacPaint, GEM/IMG and PC Paintbrush file readers,
- with Epson FX-80, LaserJet and PostScript printer
- support. Drives CGA, EGA, VGA and Hercules cards.
- HP_Slash - Make LaserJet soft fonts smaller by selectively excising
- those characters you'll never use.
- Mac2Img - MacPaint to GEM/IMG file converter... just the beast
- for Ventura users.
- Mac2Pcx - MacPaint to PCX file converter.
- Calendar - Slick perpetual calendar that tells you when the
- equinoxes happen, what day Michaelmas fell on in 1705
- and so on.
- gemCAP - Capture graphics screen in GEM/IMG paint format,
- suitable for inhalation into Ventura.
- CPM2DOS - Read CP/M formatted disks on your PC.
- IMGCUT - Crop GEM/IMG paint files into smaller files.
- ADDRESS - Memory resident envelope addresser with graphics.
- VFM - Ventura soft font manager deluxe with a side of fries.
- Adds new fonts and creates width tables with menu
- driven simplicity.
- MCOPY - Copying program which packs as many files as possible
- onto a floppy, pauses when the current floppy is
- full and asks for another one.
- D - A simple sorted directory program which contains neither
- a word processor nor a radish straightener.
- TCAP - A text screen capture program which generates GEM/IMG
- graphics that look like your text, all ready for inhalation
- into Ventura.
- ICON - Converts files between MacPaint, IMG, GIF, TIFF and PCX. Still
- in the Beta stage at this writing.
- DMCL - Dot matrix control language... macro driven effects control
- and printing program for dot matrix printers.
-
- If you can't find them in the public domain, they're available
- from us for $10.00 each. Source is available for Scoop, for $25.00.
-
- The author assumes no responsibility for any damage or loss
- caused by the use of these programs, however it comes down. If
- you can think of a way a picture program can cause you damage
- or loss you've a sneakier mind than mine.
-
- That's it...