Doc-To-Help 2012 Offers Mobile HTML5-based Output and New Language Format
This announcement was prepared by ComponentOne.
PITTSBURGH, PA – January 25, 2012 – Doc-To-Help, the trusted name and award-winning product in the Help authoring tool market, today announced the release of Doc-To-Help 2012. This first release of the New Year offers a brand new output designed for mobile devices.
Doc-To-Help's Mobile Help turns any content into a self-contained website designed for mobile devices. The process is simplified into three easy steps. First, write (or import) content, then publish, and finally post it online. This keeps with the Doc-To-Help legacy of the being the "all-in-one-authoring and publishing solution." The mobile HTML5-based output offers complete navigation, table of contents, index, and multi-touch (i.e., swipe and pinch) support.
Doc-To-Help's Product Manager, Dan Beall stated, "We've created a sample and short video that shows how users may produce web-based Help designed specifically for mobile browsers, making the task of producing mobile content less daunting."
"The emergence of mobile devices as a content delivery mechanism for millions of users has prompted the technical community to also support these on-the-go users. By using Doc-To-Help, the content creators can deliver the information to the users in the format most suitable for them," said Beall. "Additionally, we have enabled Word users to create output for mobile devices. You can import virtually any Word document and have a mobile site in minutes."
The 2012 release of Doc-To-Help also includes support for Microsoft Office 365, a right-to-left output, Eclipse Help, and enhancements to its popular NetHelp output. Doc-To-Help already integrates with Microsoft SharePoint for content management and output hosting, but users can now use Office 365 and SharePoint online.
The new right-to-left output makes it very easy for communicators who need to produce documentation in languages such as Hebrew or Arabic. Users simply choose the appropriate theme and they get a fully designed right-to-left output. In a blog post titled, "NetHelp Goes Right-To-Left," Doc-To-Help's Documentation Product Specialist, Brad Keller writes that, "One of the biggest challenges facing any organization that needs to create content in right-to-left (RTL) format is making sure that Help and Web content make sense in context and are easy to navigate and use. For years, forcing a desktop or web-based Help system to follow RTL rules and conventions required a great deal of "post-production" work and hard coding, with the results often falling short of expectations."
Keller shares that in this 2012 release, Doc-To-Help's web-based Help format supports RTL languages and is available in RTL format. He also details a sample project featuring this new RTL format, "Using a Hebrew document that Alex Masycheff from WritePoint gave me, I followed the same instructions I outlined in my Take Any Word Document and Publish it in Minutes post to create a Doc-To-Help project, followed the RTL instructions, and posted the sample RTL project here."
Availability
A 30-day Doc-To-Help Enterprise trial is available at http://www.doctohelp.com/
. The company offers purchase options online at http://www.doctohelp.com/Store/
or by telephone (800.858.2739 or 412.681.4343).
All product and company names mentioned are trademarks of their respective owners.