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Subject:Re: advice on FrameMaker-to-HTML tools, please From:Tim Altom <taltom -at- IQUEST -dot- NET> Date:Fri, 27 Sep 1996 10:51:00 EST
At 03:46 PM 9/26/96 PST, you wrote:
> Colleagues,
> My company, Tesseract Corporation, generates its documentation
> (thousands of pages of it) using FrameMaker 5.1, and distributes it to
> its customers via CD, with each CD including a general index and
> search engine from Adobe.
> We have started looking at products that seem appropriate to help
> with the FrameMaker=>HTML conversions -- so far we have identified
> Adobe's "Hot Tamale," InfoAccess' "HTML Transit," Quadralay's
> "WebWorks Publisher 3.0," and Harlequin's "WebMaker"; are there any
> others that we should be considering? Has anyone any experience with
> the task I've described, or any products that help with that task?
> Any advice and pointers you can offer will be appreciated.
Simply put, nothing does 100% if you're looking for sparkling HTML. You'll
have to hand-code a few things.
That said, WebWorks is expensive but extremely powerful. Almost equally
powerful is Harlequin's WebMaker, but WebMaker has the wonderful addition of
an already-built set of rules that it uses to guess the HTML, if that's what
you want. You can change the rules, although it takes a little programming
expertise. With Quadralay's WebWorks you have to set rules up before you can
translate.
No tool is intuitive, like a word processor. And no tool is simply a filter.
You'll have to do a lot of testing and setup. That's people are coming to
vendors like me to do the preliminary work, and often the production, too.
Are you still going to distribute via CD? That's a viable option, you know.
CD authors are moving in that direction.
Tim Altom
Vice President, Simply Written, Inc.
317.899.5882 (voice) 317.899.5987 (fax)
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FrameMaker-to-HTML Conversions
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