Twist & Shout - Sideways Printing, Banner Making & A Bonus! Copyright 1988 David W. Batterson With so many businesses using spreadsheets these days, a utility program which prints files sideways has become a necessity, not a novelty. For many years these programs have been available as public domain software and shareware on bulletin boards. There's also a popular commercial sideways print program called Sideways. Now The Software Toolworks, publisher of Chessmaster 2000 and Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing! has come up with a rock 'n' roll combo called Twist & Shout. Twist turns those files 90 degrees to print them lengthwise across the paper. Shout is a program to produce attention-getting banners. Thrown in for good measure is something every user who prints a lot needs: a print spooler. The sideways program is the heavyweight of the three, but with friendly menus and clear instructions, you'll be doing the Twist in no time--and no advice from Chubby Checker is required! Installation is quite easy; a hard disk is recommended. You just follow what the screen tells you to do next. That's the way it should be. [In computing, "no pain, no gain" should NOT apply.] There's one important thing that you must do. Make sure your CONFIG.SYS file has the statement FILES=20 in it. If not, modify it so it does. Twist can be used either as a stand-alone program, or as an "Add-In" to Lotus 1-2-3, Quattro or Framework. It reads Lotus files (.WKS, .WK1, etc.) and Quattro (.WKQ) files directly, so no file conversion is required. Twists's menu (and Shout's also) will be familiar to Lotus users since it has a similar style. There's the same "anchor and pull" method of selecting ranges. Various options allow changing type size, spacing between characters and lines, margins, and printing characteristics such as double-strike, bold, underline, italics and color--if you have a color printer, naturally. Another use besides spreadsheets is printing ASCII (pure text) files. Don't try to print documents from your word processor, with embedded commands. Stick with ASCII files only; these are sometimes called DOS text files. I tested Twist by printing up a list of products I've reviewed, using tiny, large and extra large type sizes. The three versions all came out fine. Though not necessarily designed with this in mind, I can see a great use for TWISTing text files: helping the visually impaired. You could print out letters, articles, recipes and other writings in extra large size, making them much easier to read. You could also use it for posting notices on bulletin boards at work. Speaking of notices, nothing gets attention in the office or at a party like a big banner! I've been making them since my old Apple //c days, and they never fail to get a good reaction. Shout is different than many other banner programs, since it lets you print four lines (or six with 13.5" paper), unlike Print Shop which only allows one. Besides inputting a selection of 26 symbols, you have the choice of using Graphics, Auto or Manual modes. Typefaces can be varied, and include Times Roman, Script, Olde English and Sans Serif. There's support for color printers too, like with Twist. Disk Spool II was included with Twist & Shout because printing spreadsheets sideways or printing banners can take a LONG time. Meanwhile, you are unable to use the computer unless you have a printer buffer hooked up. Instead of data going directly to the printer, a spooler program forces the data onto a disk file. Then it is fed to the printer, while control of your PC returns to you. Disk Spook II is memory-resident, and works along side other TSR (Terminate and Stay Resident) programs with no fighting. It takes up less than 25K too. To remove it from memory, you must reboot. Or you can obtain a program which removes TSR programs from memory; ask your software dealer or check BBSs for public domain programs which do the job. The default hot key, left