Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
That's where a complete document management system, such as the one offered by Interleaf, comes into play.
Interleaf software was available in many languages including Japanese text layout.
This reduces the interleaf friction and thus softens the ride.
Interleaf Publisher provides its own environment which includes a word processor, graphics package and so on.
He made about $2 million from helping to start Interleaf, an early vendor of word processing software, in 1981.
Interleaf has made it easier in the sense that you fill in forms."
Interleaf plans to include several "prefabricated" active document forms in its new versions.
Interleaf released its first product in 1985.
Founded in 1981, Interleaf was a company that created computer software products for the technical publishing creation and distribution process.
Interleaf did not produce new versions of Author/Editor.
For example, he favors Interleaf Inc., a maker of products for desktop publishing.
Some systems still rely on a batch pagination method while others, like Interleaf, do the whole thing on the fly.
Interleaf was founded by David Boucher and Harry George in 1981.
In the document management area, Interleaf competed with Documentum.
Workstation based publishing systems like Interleaf are an industry standard but offer very little more than the Macintosh in terms of actual capabilities.
A Macintosh version of Publisher also exists but this is marketed by Interleaf itself.
In 1990, Interleaf moved from Cambridge, to Waltham.
Designing document management systems at Interleaf led him to found his first startup, Document.com.
Besides the prefabricated active documents, the new versions of Interleaf will contain simple tools to allow the user to customize other forms.
Broadvision acquired Interleaf in January 2000.
The fact that it created structured documents enabled Interleaf to add its Active Document capabilities in the early 1990s.
Interleaf says that RDM can manage document information from any machine and any application.
After several versions, Author/Editor was sold with the Panorama suite to Interleaf in September, 1998.
For unstructured long document publishing, such as technical manuals, Framemaker and Interleaf are the most common choices.
Interleaf, a leading maker of electronic publishing systems for corporate customers, is planning to include active document technology in its products by the end of the year.