| Title: | DECWINDOWS 26-JAN-89 to 29-NOV-90 | 
| Notice: | See 1639.0 for VMS V5.3 kit; 2043.0 for 5.4 IFT kit | 
| Moderator: | STAR::VATNE | 
| Created: | Mon Oct 30 1989 | 
| Last Modified: | Mon Dec 31 1990 | 
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 | 
| Number of topics: | 3726 | 
| Total number of notes: | 19516 | 
    I though I would post this here since the BULOVA::DECWINDOWS conference
    appears to have died (No notes for a long time).
    
    I demonstrated DECview3D, DECwrite and Bookreader to Dupont (the
    chemical giant) on Friday for use in the publication of online
    procedures and maintenance manuals. They were very impressed with the
    tools (especially live links between CAD drawings - DECview3D -
    DECwrite).
    
    They also liked Bookreader as and end user tool for viewing the
    publications. They liked the hot spot concept for viewing CAD figures
    annotated with DECview3D however they wondered if it would ever be
    possible to actually invoke DECview3D from Bookreader in the same way
    as you use Live Application links from DECwrite (hot-spot to
    application). The user clicks on a Figure hot-spot and up comes
    DECview3d with the drawing to allow them to zoom etc.
    
    Will this ever be possible? Could this could be custom coded? How much
    effort would it be to include this functionality in Bookreader?
    
    Thanks.
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3684.1 | reset your seen map? | STAR::SZETO | Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng. | Mon Nov 19 1990 10:59 | 13 | 
| >                      <<< Note 3684.0 by TROA02::WEAVER >>>
>                           -< Bookreader hot-spots? >-
>    I though I would post this here since the BULOVA::DECWINDOWS conference
>    appears to have died (No notes for a long time).
    
    Presumably you meant the BOOKREADER conference.  (This here *is* the
    DECWINDOWS conference.)
    
    I suggest you do a SET SEEN/BEFORE=some-date when you're in the
    BOOKREADER conference to catch up on notes written since then.
    
    --Simon
    
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