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finalcopyii
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1992-12-14
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Path: menudo.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!usenet
From: clare@nynexst.com (Clare Chu)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
Subject: REVIEW: Final Copy II
Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.applications
Date: 14 Dec 1992 15:23:20 GMT
Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
Lines: 520
Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <1gi8t9INN1cq@menudo.uh.edu>
Reply-To: clare@nynexst.com (Clare Chu)
NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
Keywords: word processor, graphics, commercial
PRODUCT NAME
Final Copy II. Release 1.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION
A WYSIWYG ("What You See Is What You Get") word processor for the
Commodore Amiga, distinguished by its superior printing technology
and graphical features.
AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
Name: SoftWood, Inc.
Address: P.O. Box 50178
Phoenix, Arizona 85076
Telephone: (602) 431-9151, (800) 247-8330
FAX: (602) 431-8361
PRICE, MAIL-ORDER (All prices are in US dollars)
$89.95
[MODERATOR'S NOTE: The list price is $159.95. - Dan]
Upgrade from Final Copy: $30.00.
SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
HARDWARE
Required: 2 floppy drives, 1 MB RAM.
Recommended: Hard drive
Works with 68000 processor and above.
SOFTWARE
Works with AmigaDOS 1.3, 2.0, and above.
COPY PROTECTION
None.
Installs easily on a hard drive with the included "Install" program.
MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
Amiga 500 1/2 Meg Chip, 1/2 Meg Fast, 2 floppy drives, 1.3 ROMs
Amiga 3000 1 Meg Chip, 4 Meg Fast, hard drive, 2.04 ROMs
REVIEW
Introduction
============
Final Copy II is SoftWood's latest incarnation of Final Copy, their
highly successful word processor. Final Copy's main claim to fame is the
use of outline font technology to generate crisp, clean output using the full
resolution of your printer. Final Copy prints with any Workbench supported
printer and provides outline fonts on any Amiga, even those still running
1.3. Final Copy II adds new features such as structured drawing tools, mail
merge, master pages and styles sheets, as well as an improved handling of
IFF, HAM and 24bit ILBM graphics, and an improved ARexx command set. Final
Copy II is offered in an American version and a British version. I have been
very happy with Final Copy and therefore was one of the first to upgrade to
Final Copy II. First off, let me mention that SoftWood is very good about
contacting registered owners. They even sent me a few upgrades from Final
Copy 1.3 to Final Copy 1.3.2, after I sent in my registration card. And the
upgrade to Final Copy II was only $30. Final Copy II installs easily to
your hard disk, but requires two floppy drives and some disk swapping if you
want to access all the different fonts, spell checker and thesaurus.
SoftWood provides six fonts and a drawer of 29 PostScript-compatible fonts.
My first impression of Final Copy was relief. I had bought my
husband ProWrite 3.0.1 for Christmas, and he was immediately disappointed in
its print quality on our Hewlett Packard DeskJet 500. After trying all the
gymnastics about fiddling with densities, magnifying and reduction, the
print quality was still noticeably jaggy: certainly NOT resume quality. He
ended up using the draft mode (which uses the DeskJet internal fonts) for
his reports. And the ranting and raving, I didn't hear the end of it. So
when Final Copy came out, I wasn't ready to believe their ads. After all, I
believed that ProWrite was the best (highly rated by AmigaWorld), and found
it lacking in the most important feature of print quality. So I was
hesitant and skeptical when I read all the nice things that people were
saying about Final Copy. That is, until a kind soul on the network offered
to send me a printout from his Final Copy, complete with an imported graphic
picture, and various fonts of all different point sizes, all printed out on
his DeskJet 500. All I can say is that the printout was almost
indistinguishable from a laser printer. I rushed right out and bought Final
Copy, and we've been using it since for my husband's resume, my personal
correspondence, and a newsletter I put out for my family starring our son
Tony (including a B&W scanned photo).
Fonts and Printing
==================
Print quality is, in my opinion, the most important aspect of a word
processor. Others may disagree, but what matters most to me is the look of
the finished product: the actual letters on the paper. Printouts must be
letter quality on printers capable of letter quality printout. Final Copy
exceeds my expectations for printing quality. The choice of fonts makes it
possible to get very professional looking documents on a DeskJet 500. Final
Copy II also has great PostScript support. You can send the output either
directly to a PostScript printer or to a file. I've used the latter option
quite successfully as I have access to a PostScript printer at work. Final
Copy II includes a drawer of PostScript-like fonts. They are basically
clones of the most popular PostScript fonts, including Avant-Garde, Bookman,
Courier, Helvetica, New Century Schoolbook, Palatino, Times and Zapf
Chancery. You don't need a PostScript printer to use these fonts as Final
Copy II uses its own "Nimbus Q" font format and does a graphic dump to any
Workbench supported printer. In any case, I found the print speed on the
DeskJet 500 reasonable, although not lightning fast. It was certainly
faster than my previous word-processor that actually printed blank lines at
300 dpi as white pixels!
SoftWood also offers four volumes of outline fonts called
"SoftFaces." I bought Volume #4, which includes a collection of business
and decorative fonts. All of these fonts can be converted and then
downloaded to a PostScript printer. I've used the PostScript compatible
fonts as well as the extra fonts on business correspondence and found no
trouble with kerning and spacing. All of the typefaces are "outline
typefaces," so they can be used in sizes ranging from 4 to over 300 points.
Some of the decorative typefaces don't look too good in smaller point sizes,
but usually they're used as headlines or banners.
Using lots of fonts is extremely easy on an Amiga with a hard disk
and lots of memory. However on a 1 Meg Amiga 500 with two floppy drives,
you're limited in the number of fonts and document size. Sorry I can't
be more specific, because I have my A500 packed away. But I do remember not
being able to make a "sampler document" where I wanted to print an example
of every typeface that comes with Final Copy. I was also not able to print
out a two page resume with 3 fonts loaded while in interlace-screen mode. I
had to quit Final Copy and restart it in Workbench screen-mode (to save
memory) and print out the document. There is no warning message that memory
is getting low. You just find that the screen flashes when you try to do
something.
A neat trick for the two floppy drive user is to copy the fonts that
you want to use onto the disk where you store your documents. This means
that you don't have to swap disks when loading up your document from another
floppy. Final Copy II has a "select and replace" option where it asks you
for fonts that it can't find. I really love this feature, as it was missing
on Final Copy 1.3.2 which didn't allow you to "delete" fonts. You can now
put your fonts in any directory you like. This is especially convenient for
the floppy drive user since he can now copy font drawers to his various
document floppies. There is a ToolType where you can store the path of the
default drawer when opening a font. Finally, Final Copy II now provides
ARexx access to specifying fonts, a feature missing in the original Final
Copy.
Final Copy II excels in print quality and font support and gives the
average Amiga user the ability to create high quality documents without
resorting to a desktop publishing package.
Graphics
========
Final Copy II can import pictures and brushes created in the
standard Amiga graphic format, IFF ILBM. This includes HAM, Extra-Half-Brite
(EHB), and 24 bit IFF ILBMs. You can make the text "flow" automatically