Ami Pro 3.0 for OS/2 | - by Chris Wenham |
Ami Pro is Lotus' offering in this category. It's an aging product in need of update, but this is promised with Word Pro for OS/2 (the name change made, I guess, to get through to those who think a word processor needs to have 'Word' in its title somewhere).
When installing, Ami Pro gives you four options: Complete, Laptop, Custom, and Options-Only. It also has features for installing on a server. Since I have a nice large hard drive in no need of Jenny Craig yet, I chose Complete.
Quite pleasantly, the install completed flawlessly. I was very impressed with it.
At the bottom of Ami Pro's screen is a status/control bar with many timesaving features. The first three spaces describe the formatting style, font and font size being used. Clicking them pops up a list of available changes, such as from Body Text to a Bulleted List, or from Times Roman to Helvetica. Very handy.
The SmartIcons too are a boon, especially because there are several different sets, each dedicated to a specific task. The default set gives you all you need for basic editing and formatting tasks, and there are sets for graphics, tables, long documents, 'macro goodies', 'working together', proofing and more.
Graphics are a disappointment. I was expecting to see the great graphics and charting tools that were in the Windows version, but alas they do not appear in the OS/2 version. The Equation Editor is still there though, and there are some limited image processing tools, although they work only with greyscale TIFF files. Ami Pro is still capable of importing many bitmap formats as well as several vector graphics formats. It includes a library of stock color clip art too.
For editing a document you have three different choices: Layout, which is true WYSIWYG editing; Outline, where paragraphs and titles are arranged in a hierarchical order and can be promoted, demoted, moved up and down as you please; and Draft, where pictures and page formatting are temporarily discarded so you can get down to the job of composing and editing.
Several more features are littered through the program, including something called Power Fields which can embed dynamically changing data into the document, used for creating things like indexes and tables of contents. The features of Ami Pro are good, even with some of the best ones from its Windows counterpart missing.
As for the rest of the program, configurability is 'comfortable' although not outstanding. Ami Pro can run a macro of your choosing at startup and shutdown, giving you the power to really customize if you wish (such as having it open the last file edited when first started). This power probably won't excite most casual users who don't want to learn another macro language.
The review system used was an AMD 486 DX2/80, 8 megabytes of RAM, SuperVGA at 800x600x64k colors, and FileBar as a replacement shell (therefore no overhead from the Workplace Shell loaded).
First I loaded in a large document, the Project Gutenburg edition of Alice in Wonderland. It formatted to about 86 pages in Ami Pro. The time between selecting the document for loading and being able to get down to editing was something like 3 or 4 seconds; although the first pages were editable, the rest were still being formatted and the scroll-bar was readjusting for a few minutes. I started up at the top and scrolled my way through the pages until I reached the last page. This took 1 minute 42 seconds--just over a second per page in Layout mode. In Draft mode it was 1 minute 26 seconds to scroll all the way through.
I noticed a definite delay when jumping from Layout mode to Outline mode on the first pass. I waited for about four or five minutes for the process to get done (not much swapping, just processor drain).
Another bottleneck proved to be printing, which took an unusual amount of swapping. There is an option in Tools->User-Setup for changing printing to either a background or a foreground job. Setting it to print in the foreground made printing much faster. Other than printing, screen-updates weren't that snappy and occasionally Ami Pro would talk to the swap file for half a minute and refuse to respond to any of my commands.
In short, I've given Ami Pro's performance a good run-through, even to the point of loading up Roget's Thesaurus (Project Gutenberg edition again) which formatted to about 620 pages. Scrolling through this document was still fast and only prompted a little 'clicking' to the hard disk. I consider Ami Pro to be usable and quite tolerable on this 8 meg machine. Nonetheless, performance isn't stellar.
Nonetheless, I can't wait to see Ami Pro's successor, Word Pro, when it comes out in early '96. Lotus is offering it for a, "$19.95 shipping and handling charge," to those who buy Lotus Ami Pro between April 24,1995 and the ship date of Word Pro.
editor's note: Lotus offers Ami Pro v3.1 with the latest version of SmartSuite for OS/2. While no editorial copy was available at the time of this writing, they claim this version is, "designed from the ground up for the graphical 32-bit OS/2 2.0 environment," whereas v3.0 seems to be a port of 16-bit code.
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