[6322] in www-talk@info.cern.ch

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Re: Structured text v. page descriptions (was Netscape, HTML, and Designers)

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Jeremy D. Allaire)
Tue Oct 25 14:26:55 1994

Date: Tue, 25 Oct 1994 19:22:21 +0100
Errors-To: postmaster@www0.cern.ch
Errors-To: postmaster@www0.cern.ch
Reply-To: jallaire@maroon.tc.umn.edu
From: jallaire@maroon.tc.umn.edu (Jeremy D. Allaire)
To: Multiple recipients of list <www-talk@www0.cern.ch>


>While I can create hypertext links that work _within_ an Acrobat document,
>though, I can't, at this time, create links to other documents/resources on
>the Web. I suppose I'd like to see someone come up with a browser that
>could handle both HTML _and_ pdf documents internally, rather than using a
>helper application (Acrobat), and could deal with links in those pdf docs
>to other WWW resources. That would certainly go a long way towards giving
>us pesky graphic designers what we've been noisily clamouring for.
>

Adobe and Spyglass recently announced a partnership of sorts.  Acrobat 2.0
contains an API, which, according to Andrew Busey (S-Mosaic Prod. Manager),
allows
Web developers to create documents in a professional design environment, send
them through the Acrobat 2.0 Distiller ($1,599), and then manually insert
hyperlinks
which in fact point to other Web resources -- either an HTML page, an
executable URL, or
another Acrobat file.  When a user has opened the Acrobat file through the
Spyglass
browser, Acrobat then works with S-Mosaic if a user clicks on an Internet
based hyperlink
within the Acrobat document.

I think this about solves it.

Now, we need this standardized.  Good luck . . . .

Jeremy Allaire


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