Desktop publishing was first developed at
Xerox PARC in the 1970s. A contradictory claim states that desktop publishing began in 1983 with a program developed by James Davise at a community newspaper in Philadelphia. The program Type Processor One ran on a
PC using a
graphics card for a
WYSIWYG display and was offered commercially by Best Info in 1984. Desktop
typesetting with only limited page makeup facilities arrived in 1978–1979 with the introduction of
TeX, and was extended in 1985 with the introduction of
LaTeX. The desktop publishing market took off in 1985 with the introduction in January of the Apple
LaserWriter laser printer for the year-old
Apple Macintosh personal computer. This momentum was kept up with the release that July of
PageMaker software from
Aldus, which rapidly became the standard software application for desktop publishing. With its advanced layout features, PageMaker immediately relegated
word processors like
Microsoft Word to the composition and editing of purely textual documents. Word did not begin to acquire desktop publishing features until a decade later, and by 2003, it was regarded only as "good" and not "great" at desktop publishing tasks. The term "desktop publishing" is attributed to Aldus founder
Paul Brainerd, who sought a marketing catchphrase to describe the small size and relative affordability of this suite of products, in contrast to the expensive commercial
phototypesetting equipment of the day.
Ventura Publisher was one of the first popular desktop publishing packages for
IBM PC compatible computers, typically running
MS-DOS, in 1986. The software was originally developed by
Ventura Software. The first version of Ventura Publisher was released in 1986 with worldwide distribution by
Xerox. Ventura Publisher allowed file sizes large enough for magazine type publications through a chapter capability, The ability to create
WYSIWYG page layouts on screen and then
print pages containing text and graphical elements at 300
dpi resolution was a major development for the personal computer industry. The ability to do all this with industry standards like
PostScript also radically changed the traditional publishing industry, which at the time was accustomed to buying end-to-end turnkey solutions for digital typesetting which came with their own proprietary hardware workstations. Newspapers and other print publications began to transition to DTP-based programs from older layout systems such as
Atex and other programs in the early 1980s. Desktop publishing was still in its early stage in the early 1980s. Users of the PageMaker/LaserWriter/Macintosh 512K system endured frequent software crashes, Mac's low-resolution 512x342 1-bit
monochrome screen, the inability to control
letter spacing,
kerning, and other
typographic features, and the discrepancies between screen display and printed output. However, it was an unheard-of combination at the time, and was received with considerable acclaim. Behind the scenes, technologies developed by
Adobe Systems set the foundation for professional desktop publishing applications. The LaserWriter and LaserWriter Plus printers included scalable Adobe
PostScript fonts built into their
ROM memory. The LaserWriter's PostScript capability allowed publication designers to proof files on a local printer, then print the same file at DTP
service bureaus using
optical resolution 600+ ppi PostScript printers such as those from
Linotronic. Later, the
Macintosh II was released, which was considerably more suitable for desktop publishing due to its greater expandability, support for large color
multi-monitor displays, and its
SCSI storage interface (which allowed hard drives to be attached to the system). Macintosh-based systems continued to dominate the market into 1986, when the
GEM-based
Ventura Publisher was introduced for
MS-DOS computers. PageMaker's pasteboard metaphor closely simulated the process of creating layouts manually, but Ventura Publisher automated the layout process through its use of tags and
style sheets and automatically generated indices and other body matter. This made it particularly suitable for the creation of manuals and other long-format documents. Desktop publishing moved into the home market in 1986 with Professional Page for the
Amiga,
Publishing Partner (now PageStream) for the
Atari ST, GST's
Timeworks Publisher on the PC and Atari ST, and
Calamus for the
Atari TT030. Software was published even for 8-bit computers like the
Apple II and
Commodore 64: Home Publisher, The Newsroom, and
geoPublish. During its early years, desktop publishing acquired a bad reputation as a result of untrained users who created poorly organized, unprofessional-looking "
ransom note effect" layouts. == Terminology ==