I have maintained a NB license for the past couple years, but, if one
uses it *infrequently* (such as to print the occasional document on
contemporary printers, as I do) it remains a rather expensive solution, just
for that. Ongoing changes to NB may have also pulled the rug out from
under the ability to use your longstanding keyboard macros or xpl like the U2
library with it. (If that is incorrect, I hope to be enlightened on that
score.)
The
Search function in 7 is pretty bad, if not the complete disaster that the
"Search Pup" was in XP, until one disabled it. What I'd really like to
discover is some alternate utility as good as the old FileFind (FF) from
Norton 4.5, back in the DOS days. That could bring you up lists of files
-- probably with optional use of wild cards -- *or* even specific text strings
in a file, and in surprisingly fast searches.
One
other thing of a display nature that you did not mention is the Aero (or is it
"Metro" now ?), that became standard with 7. I can tell you that that
"disappearing / reappearing glass window" can be very disconcerting for some
older, longtime Win users. It will suddenly overlay something else, or
the (perhaps fullscreen) window you were working in will seem to disappear
entirely, when your mouse pointer strays a bit. I've often been tempted
to disable this "feature", but for certain reasons never got around to doing
so.
Jordan
From:
Bill Troop
To: xywrite@xxxxxxxx
Sent: Saturday, March 8, 2014 6:03
AM
Subject: Re: Staying
with XP after April 8 2014 (was Win 7 vs Win 8)
> Longer term, I'm hoping that Nota Bene will be our
salvation.
Is there any evidence that Nota Bene will ever support
OpenType fully or even Unicode fully? Will NotaBene modernize sufficiently
to support fine typography at even the level of Word?
There was a
time when XyWrite/Nota Bene led the field on book
production/typesetting features. I often think it's a pity that it hasn't
continued to evolve in those directions.
. . .
Regarding XP
to Win 7, I would say that the transition takes about an hour. 7 is much
easier to use, and really is easier on the eye. One thing to note, however:
while it is easily possible in XP to search for files that have no extension
- - something which some XyWriters, including me, alas, have got into the
bad habit of doing - - MS search facilities after XP (Vista and onwards) do
not have a mechanism for search-indexing files without extension names, so
some other form of file-search becomes obligatory. That said, I am finding
that there Win 8.1 may have finally brought back some limited ability to
index and quicly search for files without
extensions.