JMHAAS@MTUS5.BITNET (Elezar) (02/02/91)
I recall reading back in an old Commodore magazine in their GEOS feature where the guy once used a special printer driver that doubled the printer resolution and got around the problem that some have with one's printer not having enough dpi in order to print an entire geos document.. It was a "laser" type driver for printers. My own printer is a Star Gemini II If anyone has any info, please post or send email to the above address. Thanks. --Elezar
mroussel@alchemy.chem.utoronto.ca (Marc Roussel) (02/04/91)
In article <91032.125416JMHAAS@MTUS5.BITNET> JMHAAS@MTUS5.BITNET (Elezar) writes: >I recall reading back in an old Commodore magazine in their GEOS >feature where the guy once used a special printer driver that >doubled the printer resolution and got around the problem that >some have with one's printer not having enough dpi in order to >print an entire geos document.. It was a "laser" type driver for >printers. My own printer is a Star Gemini II I believe you're referring to the lasermatrix driver. It's up on Qlink, so you can look for it there. It comes with a menu-driven editor that guides the user through the process of adapting the driver to his or her printer. It doesn't quite exactly work as Elezar describes. Lasermatrix uses the high resolution graphics mode of many printers to smooth out graphics. It makes output from geoWrite in particular look really sharp. If your printer doesn't have a high-resolution mode, you can't use lasermatrix. Also, you can't use lasermatrix to overcome GEOS natural preference for 80dpi. It doesn't make anything wider (or narrower), just smoother. Nevertheless, it's an impressive driver. Marc R. Roussel mroussel@alchemy.chem.utoronto.ca