Then, spurred in the commercial market by CD32, and by Aminet CDs on the compilation side, things began to take off. The art of the shareware CD-ROM has been pretty well explored, by Aminet, Fred Fish, and others such as the Meeting Pearls crowd. On the other end of the spectrum, we've seen multi-disc collections from Almathera. Games are still released on both floppy and CD format, although CD32's premature demise as a going concern has curbed the expansion of gaming CDs.
Now, slowly but surely, CD-ROM is finally gaining the sort of legitimacy for commercial applications that it has enjoyed for years on other platforms. A major step in this direction is the Personal Suite CD-ROM from Cloanto, the shining beacon of Amiga development in Italy.
Personal Suite sets out to be just that--a collection of utilities an individual user will find a great deal of use for. Headlining the CD are the <Personal< applications: Personal Paint 6.4, Personal Write, and Personal Fonts Maker from Cloanto and Personal SBase 4, from Oxxi. Also included are a set of Kara fonts, Cloanto's DirDiff tool for watch-dogging and protecting extremely large file copies, and the PNG datatype. To round out the CD, a collection of Amiga artwork and animation is supplied, as well as some classic novels, which have all of a sudden become a very popular item for CD-ROM compilers.
Personal Suite ships in a container very much like a film can--a metal tin just big enough to hold the CD. No paper. All documentation is online in AmigaGuide format, in the Big Four Amiga languages, English, German, French, and Italian. The majority of the books are in English, with a small assortment in Italian.
It is the hope of any CD such as this to be more than the sum of its parts. But to understand if this is the case, it is best to take a look at the parts first.
PPaint is, at heart, a paint and animation program with a great deal of features. Most notable is support for a wide range of filetypes for loading and saving (including datatype support under OS 3.x), and the built-in image processing features, allowing any one of a great deal of present effects or programmable convolves to be applied to an entire image or any user-definable area, a process as easy as picking an effect and <lasso-ing< a region.
The new version provides support for graphic cards through the display database, and I was considerably impressed by its performance on my Retina Z-III running CyberGraphX. The speed, and solidity of the display, was astounding.
In addition, the new manual offers helpful tips and tricks for Amiga artists, including advice on dealing with the varying sizes of pixels in the Amiga environment versus the rest of the world. PPaint allows you to force square pixel usage.
Such features as multiple-level undo, built-in virtual memory, and the DPaint-paradigm multiple function buttons (filled/unfilled objects, for example) are all welcome.
PPaint alone pretty well makes the CD-ROM worth the price of admittance.
I suppose what throws it off is a total lack of WSIWYG. Instead, a display very much like that of the text editor of your choice greets you. But PWrite allows mail merging.
The interface clearly hearkens back to an era of OS 1.3, despite the updated 1995 copyright notice. No concept of a display database exists, instead you can choose to toggle interlace, A2024 mode, and the like. I did find that a forced promotion to a 640x480x16 CyberGraphX screen worked acceptably.
PWrite isn't really as comfortable to use as most text editors. For example, text highlighting is not done by merely clicking and dragging, it is a mode that must be toggled.
The one saving grace of PWrite is its ability to translate ASCII data into a number of international and cross-platform modes. It's worth a look, but it won't be the document generator of choice here any time soon.
There's a lot of learning to do if you're going to get a relational database to jump through hoops for you. Still, the potential to do some great work is there.
The manual includes a guide to get you up and running somewhat comfortably in 15 minutes, but that's only the beginning.
Not being a typographer, it's admittedly difficult for me to comment on the relative usefulness of such a program. I've always been quite happy with the existing wealth of fonts, but can see the appeal to having access to modifications.
PFM2 adds color capabilities and the ability to use a larger (in fact, unlimited) bitmap. Unfortunately, it is hardcoded for AGA, and will not promote to a CyberGraphX 256 color screen.
PFM similarly suffers from being built from an old interface, however. It does not properly promote.
The neatest, and highest-level, tool is the Printer Driver Modifier, allowing you to mess with escape codes sent to your printer. Use only if you know what you're doing.
A number of fonts are included as object lessons and examples, and for your general use.
The books? Classics are great. AmigaGuided in one big file for your reading pleasure.
PNG is the GIF-replacement standard Cloanto helped develop after the GIF patent fiasco of recent times. It is only fair to credit Cloanto for the amount of work put in documenting the various unsavory actions of Unisys and Compuserve throughout the GIF saga, encouraging the support of a new standard. Both the datatype and a developer's kit are included.
You get two commercial applications which, while useful, have definitely seen better days. Personal Fonts Maker is functional and really can be a useful tool, and while Personal Writer is worth a look, it won't be superceding Digital Quill any time soon.
Kara fonts are nothing to sneeze at. Consider yourself lucky to have access to them.
Rounding out the CD to a comfy 646 megs are the additional artwork, fonts, and books. No complaints here.
Top that with an AmigaGuide interface linked to the applications, full manuals in multiple languages, and it seems to be a steal. It is.
My hat is off to Cloanto for paving the way for more CDs of this quality.