TITLE
    LaserWriter IINTX: Benefits of Attached Hard Drive
Article ID:
Author:
Created:
Modified:
7149

6/4/91
7/16/91

TOPIC




    What are the benefits of using an attached hard drive with a LaserWriter
    IINTX?

    1) Is the purpose of a hard drive to:
    A. increase printing speed through RAM caching?
    B. centrally locate PostScript fonts?
    C. to free up space on a local hard drive?
    D. all the above?

    2) Currently, TrueType fonts cannot be downloaded to a hard drive
    connected to a LaserWriter IINTX. Will this feature be used in the
    future and will you gain any benefit by loading TrueType fonts onto a
    hard drive connected to a LaserWriter IINTX?


DISCUSSION


    The purpose of a hard drive is primarily to centrally locate PostScript
    fonts and to free up space on a local hard drive, but can be all of the
    above.

    A hard disk attached to a LaserWriter IINTX speeds printing only if the
    fonts required for a document are stored on it and thus do not need to be
    downloaded over a network. Other uses generally slow down printing unless the
    hard disk speed versus the network speed is appreciably different. For
    example, if font scan-conversion (idle-time or otherwise) stores its cache to
    the hard disk, printing is slowed because it takes time to retrieve the cache
    from disk. An extremely fast disk may overcome this problem, but we haven't
    performed any tests that clearly prove this.

    Choice B, centrally locating PostScript fonts, is a valid use, and can speed
    up printing if those fonts are used in the document in question.

    Choice C, freeing up local hard disk space, is also valid because every
    PostScript font located on the hard disk need not be located on the user's
    hard disk. Therefore the fonts can be removed from the user's hard disk,
    freeing up storage space. Of course, a backup of these fonts should be
    kept somewhere in case the LaserWriter IINTX's hard disk ever fails.

    Another way to improve the printing speed of a LaserWriter IINTX, or any
    PostScript LaserWriter for that matter, is to download fonts using the
    LaserWriter Font Utility. If there is adequate RAM (or disk space)
    available, downloading the fonts can greatly increase print speed. And
    fonts downloaded to RAM are faster than those downloaded to disk, so
    optimum performance depends on what fonts are used most often and where
    they are stored.

    The difference between using the Font Utility to download fonts versus
    allowing them to be automatically downloaded with your document is that those
    fonts downloaded with the utility will persist until the printer is reset or
    powered off. Those fonts that are downloaded automatically with a document
    only persist for that job. The next job requiring the same fonts would
    download them again. This increases network traffic and job overhead
    appreciably, and with a busy network, can slow printing significantly.

    Similar issues are involved with TrueType fonts. With current LaserWriter
    models, the TrueType fonts and rasterizer are not available in ROM.
    Therefore, all TrueType fonts used in a document must be downloaded, along
    with the rasterizer. These fonts and their scan converted data will only be
    persistent for each job, so the effect will be nearly identical to that with
    PostScript fonts downloaded from a user's System Folder. The LaserWriter
    Font Utility, version 7.0, is able to download TrueType fonts as well as
    PostScript fonts.





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