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1993-10-23
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∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙
∙ ∙
∙ I M A G E C O P Y 2 ∙
∙ ∙
∙ reviewed by C. Good ∙
∙ ∙
∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙°∙
If you've been using Imagecopy or Imagecopy Colour then you'll know how
good this program is. Imagecopy 2 is even better - with knobs on!
If you have either of the first two I recommend you upgrade immediately,
if not, this is an essential purchase for anyone remotely interested in
viewing or printing graphics.
Jeremy Hughes (author of the FontKit series) has added some stunning
things to this new version. The program is supplied as both stand alone
and accessory versions (there's even a little program that allows you to
load Imagecopy as an application so you can view any image file from the
desktop by double clicking on it). When loading either the first thing
you'll notice is the new menu, this holds info on your free memory,
resolution, colours and palette available. From here it's a simple case
of clicking on the file or options menus and making your selection. All
functions have keyboard shortcuts thus making it very fast if you've
nimble fingers. All settings can be saved to the program/accessory for
future use.
Imagecopy 2 can view, print and convert a large number of file formats
including:- Art, Degas, Gif, IFF, IMG, MacPaint, Neo, PCX, Spectrum,
TIFF, Targa, Tiny, Windows and RSC.
Images can be displayed on any ST/TT/Falcon in any resolution, even on
large/virtually screen monitors. Images are loaded into normal GEM
windows (up to six or even 20 with MutiTOS) which can be scrolled round
with the cursor keys or in fullscreen mode with the mouse. Images are
automatically dithered to the resolution you're using whether they're
mono or colour using various dither methods or even halftones which you
can specify in the screen options menu. Information on any file can be
viewed by double clicking on the window which brings up a box containing
image size, palette, compression, file type and file size info.
A neat new feature is the ability to Tile, Overlap or Hide the open
windows which makes things a lot tidier. You can even hide the menu now
without quitting the program as happened with earlier versions. Screen or
Image colours can be altered to compensate for various monitors or to get
strange effects. Any part of an image or the whole screen can be copied
or printed. You simply rubber-band a box round the part you want then
right click inside the box. This box can be accurately sized by using the
cursor keys or by pressing 'insert' a box appears where you can enter the
exact size. Once it's drawn it can be moved around the image for precise
positioning. Screens can even be grabbed from non GEM programs using the
ALT-HELP keys.
Imagecopy 2 has comprehensive printing abilities. Images can be printed
in mono or colour on a wide range of printers, from 9-pins to Inkjets.
Obviously mono images will only print in B/W but colour images can also
be printed in B/W. Those of you with mono printers and colour kits are
catered for with CMYK separations. A brilliant new feature is the ability
to save separations as IMG files to load into DTP programs. This means
that you can now print in full colour from your mono DTP program (who
needs Calamus SL?). Imagecopy can now print images at any size anywhere
on the page in Portrait or Landscape orientation. Colour, Contrast and
the Blueness of images can all be altered to suit your printer/inks or
create special effects. Colour images with up to 16 million colours (24-
bit) can be printed using halftones for realistic colour depth which I
can say is very impressive on my BJ10 printer even if you can't see the
picture on screen with that many colours (unless you've got a Falcon of
course).
The conversion side of things is still limited to converting files to
different formats rather than resolutions (but this is being worked on
for an update soon). Thus Truecolour can only be converted to another
Truecolour file type or Low res colour can only stay Low res colour,
i.e:-Targa>TIF, PI1>XIMG, XIMG>TIF etc. The only way round this is to
load up the image you want to convert in the resolution you want then
grab the screen. Apart from this drawback it's very useful for converting
large files into compressed versions to save disk space. Imagecopy can
even load and convert the strange TIFF variations from Retouche and Didot
but not without changing the file extensions from TFF, TIC or TIH to TIF.
Sadly missing is support for JPEG files (but it's coming soon) which are
highly compressed Truecolour files which save a lot of disk space
especially on floppies.
In conclusion I must say this is a program you can't live without (mine's
one of my permanent accessories and applications on my system) if you're
serious about graphics or DTP. The only competition is Flexidump 2 (which
I haven't tried, but Imagecopy converted me from Flexidump 1 anyway) and
GEMVIEW which is PD. Apart from the few drawbacks of the file conversion
(which are being changed anyway) I'd say Imagecopy was indispensable, and
with even better goodies to be added in the future I'd say miss it at
your peril! Roll on Imagecopy 3. At £20 who could ask for more?
C.Good
Available from the ST Club, 2, Broadway, Nottingham, NG1 1PS, £19.95.
Upgrades: £10 from the Mono version, £5 from the Colour version.
Stop Press: According to the October 'ST Applications', Imagecopy 3 will
be available "early next year" and will be able to load and convert EPS
(Encapsulated Postscript) files, as well as GEM vector graphics. Jeremy
Hughes makes a point of implementing any reasonable requests for new
features, so perhaps now's the time to write to him? My chequebook's
warm and waiting!
JFW
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