In computing, Envoy was a proprietary portable document file format marketed by WordPerfect Corporation, created as a competitor for Acrobat Pro. It was introduced by Tumbleweed Communications Corporation in 1993 and shipped with WordPerfect Office in March 1994.
Filename extension |
.evy |
---|---|
Internet media type |
application/x-envoy |
Developed by | Tumbleweed Communications Corporation |
Initial release | 1993 |
Type of format | Document file format |
An Envoy file could be created by the use of a special printer driver in WordPerfect, and an application for "viewing, manipulating, annotating or printing Envoy files" was included in the WordPerfect Envoy product, together with a "runtime file" that permitted a viewer to be embedded in Envoy files and enable recipients to have "all the functionality of the full viewer without paying licensing charges".[1] The resulting document could be viewed in a separate viewer application, the Envoy Distributable Viewer, which also worked as a web browser plugin.
Unlike Adobe PDF, the file format was not publicly documented.[citation needed]
Envoy failed to make any headway against PDF, and is now largely unused. Some have reported success in reading Envoy documents by printing to PostScript from the Envoy Distributable Viewer, then converting the PostScript file to a PDF.[2] The PostScript file can also be viewed directly using a viewer such as Ghostscript.
References
edit- ^ "Revamped WordPerfect sends out an Envoy". Personal Computer World. June 1994. p. 240.
- ^ Remember Envoy?, by Robin Springall, 02-17-2005, Desktop Publishing Forum
External links
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