Tektronix Phaser 200e and GRASS4.1

  I'm hoping all the Tektronix 200e users out there
have just been at the beach this past week or so and thus
missed previous requests for help...

  I want to print GRASS4.1 maps to our Tektronix 200e.
I'm assuming I either have to write a driver or find
someone willing to share theirs. If it matters, we use a SUN
sparc 2 and run the printer from our local network. Any
advice appreciated.

-- SHaryl Walker
Dept. of Ag. Engineering
University of Illinois
Urbana, IL
guernsey@holstein.age.uiuc.edu

"S. E. Walker" (guernsey@holstein.age.uiuc.edu) writes on 13 Sep 93:

I want to print GRASS4.1 maps to our Tektronix 200e.
I'm assuming I either have to write a driver or find
someone willing to share theirs. If it matters, we use a SUN
sparc 2 and run the printer from our local network. Any

yes, it may matter, if Tek has written NeWSprint software.
Basically, this allows any printer to act like a PostScript
printer.

For example, when I was at A&M, they bought a Calcomp color printer.
We had code for a p.map driver, but we found NeWSprint to be a much
better solution (I seem to recall that they shipped us a floppy on
request). Not only could we print GRASS maps, but we could print
color output from many other color programs (e.g., dvips, FrameMaker).
(BTW, then we convert ppm output from p.map to Sun raster, used
'touchup' for annotations/prettying-it-up, and converted to ps using
pbmplus - I haven't tried ps.map yet)

Also, if a driver doesn't already exist, NeWSprint is a cheaper
solution. It may take a programmer a week or two to write/debug a
driver (depending) and most universities should be able to get
NeWSprint for a few hundred (US) smakeroos.

--Darrell

James Darrell McCauley, Purdue Univ, West Lafayette, IN 47907-1146, USA
mccauley@ecn.purdue.edu, mccauley%ecn@purccvm.bitnet, pur-ee!mccauley
*** avail. for full time employment 9/94-inquiries welcome (no hh, plz) ***

P.S., for others in-the-know, what happens to NeWSprint
w.r.t. COSE? Since I'm no longer a sys admin, I don't follow
these things too closely.