Description:
  Adobe's FrameMaker 6.0 allows any author or organization to print or  publish documents and books of virtually any size in a variety of electronic  formats (including PDF, HTML, and XML). Whether you distribute reports,  technical documents, or even full-length books, the latest version of FrameMaker  offers a powerful mix of features that will let you move your publishing efforts  online with a minimum of effort.  Just as Adobe once pioneered paper-based desktop publishing with its PageMaker  software, FrameMaker makes the same claim for electronic publishing in the  Internet era. First and foremost, FrameMaker lets you lay out your page content  with a capable set of tools and wizards. You can assemble small or large  documents of even hundreds of pages from separate files (which can be imported  from Microsoft Word or WordPerfect files as well as PDF and other formats). You  can also add hyperlinks and graphics to your document easily.   In testing, we assembled an "e-book" from a literary manuscript of over two  hundred pages, broken into a dozen chapters. FrameMaker includes solid word- processing abilities--even a spell checker and thesaurus--plus text and graphics  layout tools, so it was easy to add chapter headings and tweak text as we  created the larger document. A real strength here is that as you add pages,  FrameMaker updates all links (along with page numbers) between the table of  contents, chapters, and index. The application includes a separate book file  format and offers templates for blank chapters and other book components, so you  can create and store books easily. An absolutely indispensable feature here is  the ability to search and replace words across all sections of a document.   Another notable strength of FrameMaker 6.0 is its support for today's electronic  publishing standards. Once your FrameMaker documents are assembled, you can  distribute them in HTML, PDF, and XML. A separate bundled utility, Quadralay's  WebWorks Publisher Standard Edition, takes you even further with support for XML  with Cascading Stylesheets (CSS) and XSL. (These options let you view your  content with more precise formatting within today's browsers.) In all, with its  strong mix of layout features and support for a wide variety of electronic  standards, FrameMaker will help anyone publish documents online successfully.  --Rich Dragan
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