~terry
Wed, Jul 24, 1996 (13:00)
seed
Envoy Plug-in for Netscape 2.0 -- Tumbleweed Software's Envoy
plug-in viewer gives users the ability to view Novell's Envoy files
from within the latest release of Netscape. Envoy documents can
even be embedded within HTML documents and viewed with the
plug-in module. Going a step beyond Envoy, the plug-in viewer
gives users the capability to embed fonts, hyperlinks, indexes, and
outlines in standard Envoy files. As with Adobe's Acrobat Amber
Reader, you won't be able to create your own Envoy files with the
viewer, but you will find an abundance of examples to check out on
the 'net. Envoy itself is a portable document format (like Adobe
Acrobat) designed for the electronic distribution and viewing of
documents created by 'printing' document files with the Envoy
driver. Envoy documents ensure visual fidelity to the original
content, formatting, and graphics created within the authoring tools
at a fraction of the original file size.
As far as quality goes, Envoy presentations often exceed those of
Adobe Acrobat but are still no match for well-designed HTML
pages. However, when coupled with an HTML page, Envoy
documents can add additional dimensions to the web that were not
previously possible. Perhaps the best example of this is the ability to
embed fully functioning toolbars with the files, giving authors
New directions for perfecting their web sites. Still, documents
viewed with Envoy tend to suffer from the same jagged, hard to
read fonts that also plague Acrobat. As with Acrobat, the Envoy
viewer does excel at showing massive presentations and complex
tables, charts, graphs, and the like -- with its embedded toolbar,
hyperlink, and indexing capabilities, Envoy files can often offer
superior readability and manageability even over similar web
documents. Overall, while HTML is typically a more attractive and
more efficient use of paperless documentation, in the absence of an
Internet connection, for massive documents, or as an aid in
furthering the power and diversity of web documents, the Envoy
viewer is indeed a very useful tool for the task at hand.
Pros: Easy and free viewing or printing of Novell's Envoy files
Cons: Doesn't look or function as well as HTML documents on the
web
New: Copy to clipboard, printing, font embedding, text search,
zooming, more
Version Reviewed: Release 3/22/96 Reviewer: Forrest Stroud
Date of Review: 4/3/96 Reviewer: Forrest Stroud
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