On Fri, 2005-09-09 at 21:43 +0200, Johannes R?schel wrote: > Possibly thats interesting for Scribus...
The release of a new Adobe PostScript engine would generally not be all that noteworthy. The official Adobe PS engine is used in professional RIPs (both for presses and for large-format printers etc), and also embedded in decent quality printers. Either way, it just consumes the output that Scribus produces... and we're still constrained by PostScript 3 in that. However, the text of that announcement suggests that Adobe are pushing harder to get smaller RIPs and embedded units to support PDF-to-device. This makes me a very, very happy man. Of course, it won't have much immediate effect, as (a) lots of printers use "PostScript emulation" (non-Adobe RIPs that are often inferior, and won't support PDF), and (b) lots of people still use 10-year-old RIPs, especially for large format printers and imagesetters. Still, the day that PostScript support can be removed as obsolete (or handed off for gs to take care of via pdf2ps) sounds like a nice one to me. As it is, it's probably getting toward time to start spooling PDF rather than PostScript when printing, letting CUPS sort it out. IMO we just have to wait for gs 8.x to filter through to more distros. With PDF print jobs, if a job plays up I can chuck it through PitStop. That's likely to be *very* nice with the setup at work. I really hope Adobe have integrated PDF support so deeply into this embedded version that customers can't remove it. I'm sick of having to use PS3 to talk to even modern workgroup printers. -- Craig Ringer
