From the editor's desk

Well, the last five months have been a challenge and an interesting experience. I have to thank Trevor for giving me the opportunity, and now hand control back to him for at least the next three months. I traditionally escape the rigours of winter in Canberra by hibernating in Queensland with family. Life up there is different and I will certainly not have the computer freedom I have here, nor access to ADSL that I have become accustomed to. At the end of that sojourn I will have withdrawal symptoms and be glad to get back into the routine here. Meanwhile, I will be providing Trevor with articles, comments and reviews to the best of my ability.

There has been considerable discussion, and many work hours, put into resolving the issue of a printed version of this magazine. The resolution is that there will not be an official printed version.
The PDF file in each magazine lends itself to printing, now that I have mastered some of the irregularities and eliminated excessive borders and unnecessary headers. PDF is the world de facto standard for archiving documents. It preserves the fonts, layout, images and colour of the original document in a substantially smaller file. This takes up less storage space and is readable on every computer in the world that has a free PDF reader installed, regardless of make or model. The current version of this reader is Adobe Reader 7.0 available from here. In creating the PDF file I have to convert the HTML documents and append them in a long list within one file. Each document retains its own page numbering and there is no way to provide continuous page numbering from beginning to end of the finished file.

You should simply print this file to your printer without changing any printer settings.

Advanced users please skip this next paragraph. But I know there are readers out there who need to have it spelled out.
 If, when they are printed in whatever mode the printer is currently set at,  the pages stack up in reverse order - back to front with first on the bottom, last on top - then you will need to simply reorder the pages. Printing order will depend on the default settings of each printer.
To overcome this problem you should set the printer to PRINT IN REVERSE ORDER through the printer options, which will put page one on top and the last page on the bottom of the stack. Pick up the stack and staple or clip it to keep order

If the pages do get out of order then remember that each article has its title in the top left corner, and reordering them should be no trouble.
We are a group of Users Helping Users, so if you do not own a printer please ask your family or friends to help. Failing that, we have facilities at the PCUG Centre in Holder for printing. It has FinePrint and PDFfactory drivers installed.

My homepage with its articles on computing has turned full circle and is back on the PCUG website where it started. I am not a subscriber to TIP and am therefore on the E-mail Only Plan, but I had not realised until recently that I am provided with ample space there to accommodate my homepage. I hope it serves its purpose.

Enjoy your computing.

Terry Bibo


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