On 2017-01-13 5:19 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
On Jan 13, 2017, at 2:02 PM, Toby Thain <t...@telegraphics.com.au> wrote:
On 2017-01-13 3:17 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
On Jan 13, 2017, at 1:05 PM, Toby Thain <t...@telegraphics.com.au> wrote:
...
AUD $25,000 for a Linotype L100 PostScript imagesetter (used).
Has a 68K computer inside it with Adobe ROMs. Communication via serial or
AppleTalk.
One of the first high resolution PostScript imagesetters. Put a lot of feet of
bromide paper through it.
Neat! By the standards of the time, those were not really high image
quality, but definitely adequate and successful for newspaper work. I
remember working with them in the early 1980s.
Yes, its primary job was newspaper galley setting when I bought it, but I did
bureau work on the side. Even some negatives of questionable density ;)
The quality issue I remembered was somewhat jaggy outlines, even
though the scan resolution was entirely adequate. It was the first
outline based typesetter I've seen, and you could tell from the film --
but not from newsprint -- that the outline shapes weren't quite fine
enough. It's possible I'm remembering wrong and that was the Linotron
300 that had this issue. Perhaps so, the dates for PostScript don't
quite fit the dates when I was doing this stuff.
That machine was switchable 1270/635/317 dpi. I never saw such an issue
with the L100 at 1270dpi. It was as good as you could expect from a
capstan machine.
--Toby
paul