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-
- THE MULTIMEDIA WORKSHOP
- Presentation Creation Program
- Version 4.21
-
- Copyright 1992, Jeff Napier & Another Company
-
-
- WHO IS THE MULTIMEDIA WORKSHOP FOR?
-
- The Multimedia Workshop was created for anyone who has
- something to say. Use it to make professional-quality
- disk-based illustrated catalogs, teaching tutorials or
- employee training materials, electronic books, multimedia
- presentations, retail or shareware products. It will also
- function as a general drawing program resulting in pictures
- you can save on disk or print onto paper. For teachers,
- artists and authors, it's powers are obvious. For everyone,
- you'll find it is easy to create disks that get your ideas to
- the public. In fact, this instruction manual will not only
- cover all the basics of using The Multimedia Workshop, but
- will also explain how to write and market your products as
- shareware.
-
- (Even if you don't have artistic talent, with just a
- little practice, you'll be able to turn out impressive disks
- with drawings or simple yet effective diagrams containing
- colorful boxes, ellipses, arrows etc, to make your point!
- Furthermore, you can collect and use clip-art, files created
- by other people, in most standard .PCX formats or in
- ASCII-Vector-Graphics)
-
- WHAT DOES THE MULTIMEDIA WORKSHOP DO?
-
- The simplest way to state the nature of The Multimedia
- Workshop is to say that it is a drawing program that does a
- whole lot more than any other drawing program. It allows you
- to incorporate sound effects, music and speech into pictures
- without special equipment. Sound Blaster is also supported.
- You can create animation with it. The Multimedia Workshop
- has a simple word processor built in. There are features
- found in CAD programs, such as Grid and Coordinate Display so
- that you can make very precise pictures. These multimedia
- pictures can be drawn in Hercules, CGA, EGA or VGA graphics,
- depending on which video modes your computer can support. It
- runs fine with or without Microsoft Windows.
-
- It comes with a run-time display engine allowing you to
- chain your pictures together for sophisticated presentations.
- The run-time engine has features including automatically
- repeating shows for continuous unattended presentations,
- automatic indexing with which the end user can search for any
- word or phrase within your presentation's pictures, and
- super-easy-to-use keyboard or mouse operated menu.
-
- The Multimedia Workshop uses ASCII-Vector-Graphics,
- which is a wonderful system in which each element of a
- picture is recorded in an ordinary ASCII file on disk as it
- is drawn. For instance, a rectangle appears in the file as R
- followed by integers representing the location and size of
- the rectangle. A circle is represented by a C, followed by
- numbers marking it's location and radius. A line is
- represented with an L, an ellipse is an E, and so on. Color
- changes have codes, sound effects have codes, pattern fills
- have codes and so on. Text that appears in the pictures
- appears simply as text in the ASCII file, although text is
- preceded by some simple numbers representing the font and
- position of the text in the picture.
-
- The advantages of AVG are tremendous. Most
- significantly, a whole lot of graphic information can be
- written into a really small file. This means you can put up
- to 100 separate pictures on an ordinary 360k floppy disk!
- Furthermore, Ascii-Vector-Graphics is the secret behind sound
- effects, animation and text-search within pictures. If you
- spend time communicating on BBS's you'll especially
- appreciate that complicated pictures can be sent by modem
- quickly because of their small size.
-
- *********************** HOW IT WORKS ************************
-
- The files which compose a presentation are simply ASCII
- files which contain codes for picture elements, sound
- effects, animations and more. We call them SCRIPT FILES. The
- Multimedia Workshop or MSHOW.EXE read these files and follow
- the coded instructions, step-by-step.
-
- *********************** REQUIREMENTS ************************
-
- The requirements are few. Almost any IBM-compatible
- computer will work if it has a standard graphics card and a
- hard disk. At least 640k of RAM is also required. It works
- fine on laptop computers with CGA or VGA monochrome displays.
- (NOTE If you don't have a hard disk: A hard disk is only
- required to decompress the files for first time use. If you
- have no hard drive, you can have a friend decompress the
- files, copy them onto several floppies, and then you can use
- The Multimedia Workshop.)
-
- If you have a mouse and a fast CPU, The Multimedia
- Workshop runs more efficiently, but these options are NOT
- required. It works fine with or without Microsoft Windows
- version 3.0/3.1.
-
- If your computer has a VGA graphics system, you'll be
- able to create presentations in high-resolution VGA, or lower
- resolution CGA, EGA or Hercules, for use on other computers.
-
- If your computer has a non-VGA graphics system, you'll be
- able to create presentations at the highest resolution and
- number of colors your system can support. These will be
- displayable on other, similarly-equipped computers as well.
-
- Any end user with a standard IBM-compatible computer and
- graphics card and at least 512k RAM will be able to display
- your creations. End users do not need hard disks.
-
-
- LEGAL STUFF
-
- There are probably a few bugs. This program is growing
- quite sophisticated and development is continuing. I plainly
- state right here: You use this at your own risk. I will take
- no responsibility for any results of the use of this program.
-
- - Jeff Napier -
- August 28, 1992
- _____________________________________________________________
- end of chapter
-