ITworld.com
  Search  
ITworld Home Page ITworld Webcasts ITworld White Papers ITworld Newsletters ITworld News ITworld Topics Careers ITworld Voices ITwhirled Changing the way you view IT

High quality paper publishing considered harmful

ITworld.com 6/23/2006

Sean McGrath, ITworld.com

So, you want to produce a beautiful looking printed book/catalog of some kind? No problem. These days, you can do it all effortlessly with electronic tools. No sweat. At the end of the process you will end up with electronic master files for your publication, giving you complete freedom to produce future editions, re-use your own content in other publications and so on...

On this topic

Sadly, it does not always work out this way. It is all too easy to end up in a situation where the only version of your content that you can confidently assert matches the paper version is, um, the paper version.

Here is how this situation tends to arise. The chain starts with Betty. Betty is the domain expert who writes the content. Betty uses her desktop word processor to type up the text. Betty - being a domain expert - is a very busy and expensive resource. She does not have the time to worry about the finer points of punctuation or page layout or binding or any of that stuff.

When Betty has produced her content, she hands it over to Bob. Bob worries about punctuation and page layout and all that stuff. He uses a page layout program to make Betty's content look nice on the page and prepares it to go to the print shop in the form of postscript files.

Betty and Bob work in a pressured environment. Timelines are always tight. It is not unusual for Betty to call Bob from an airport somewhere and ask for changes to the page proofs Bob has produced. Sometimes these are just typos, sometimes they are more extensive than that. If Bob had the time, he would go back to Betty's original word processor files, make the modifications there, send them to Betty so that she has the up-to-date files, then re-process the word processor files through his page layout program.

Most of the time, Bob does not have the luxury of time required to do this. To get the job done, he makes the modifications Betty needs directly in the page layout program.

When Bob has postscript files he is happy with, he sends them on to Bill in the print shop. Bill too, works in a pressured environment. Timelines are always tight. Sometimes Bill calls Bob from an airport somewhere to ask for a change to the page proofs Bill has produced for Bob. If Bob and Bill had the time, they would work together to go back to Betty's original word processor files, make the modifications there, send them to Betty so that she has the up-to-date files, then re-process the word processor files through his page layout program, then re-generate the postscript files.

Most of the time, Bob and Bill do not have the luxury of time required to do this. To get the job done, Bill makes the modifications directly to the postscript files so that he can go ahead to create the printing plates.

Betty, Bob and Bill all try to keep track of any last minute modifications to content and try to ensure that the changes are fed back "upstream" as required. Unfortunately, with all that is going on in all of their daily working lives, it is tough to do this. It is even tougher to know that messages sent upstream actually get acted upon. There is always some higher priority item on the TODO list than "fix up the master electronic files for the last print job.".

Fast forward the clock say, 5 years. You are staring at a shelf-full of excellent paper-based publications. You decide to turn them into web pages for your new on-line business. The CEO asks the obvious question "We have all the master electronic files right?"

Are you sure of the answer?

Sean McGrath is CTO of Propylon. He is an internationally acknowledged authority on XML and related standards. He served as an invited expert to the W3C's Expert Group that defined XML in 1998. He is the author of three books on markup languages published by Prentice Hall. Visit his site at: http://seanmcgrath.blogspot.com.

Read more of Sean McGrath's ITworld.com columns here.




Sponsored Links

IP Networks Boost Secure Health Communications
AT&T provides secure communication to keep health care moving forward.
Multi-Core Test Results In Virtualized Servers
Check Out The Latest Xeon® Performance Results. Virtualized Servers vs. Non-Virtualized Servers.
IMPROVE YOUR SUPPORT EFFICIENCY
WebEx lets you remotely control, configure and install applications and updates more efficiently.
FREE virus, spyware & adware scan
Find the malware your AV missed with the Sophos Threat Detection Test.
Sign up for a Microsoft Dynamics® CRM WEBCAST
Hear globally recognized leaders in customer strategy discuss the importance and evolution of CRM.
» Buy a link now

Advertisements
Sponsored links
Bring harmony to your mix of UNIX-Linux-Windows computing environments
KODAK i1400 Series Scanners stand up to the challenge
Top 5 Reasons to Combine App Performance and Security
Locate Hidden Software on business PCs with this free tool
 Home   IT in the enterprise  Productivity paradox
www.itworld.com    open.itworld.com     security.itworld.com     smallbusiness.itworld.com
storage.itworld.com     utilitycomputing.itworld.com     wireless.itworld.com

 
Contact Us   About Us   Privacy Policy    Terms of Service   Reprints  

CIO   Computerworld   CSO   GamePro   Games.net   Industry Standard   Infoworld   ITworld  
JavaWorld   LinuxWorld  MacUser   Macworld   Network World   PC World   Playlist  

DEMO   IDG Connect   IDG Knowledge Hub   IDG TechNetwork   IDG World Expo  

Copyright © Computerworld, Inc. All rights reserved

Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Computerworld Inc. is prohibited. Computerworld and Computerworld.com and the respective logos are trademarks of International Data Group Inc.