Posts Tagged ‘Arbortext’

Community Arbortext Monster Garage

Posted in news on January 3rd, 2011 by lizfraley – Be the first to comment

The folks over at Single-Sourcing Solutions have launched a new series called “Arbortext Monster Garage” to energize the Arbortext community. They’ve lined up two sessions a month. All sessions are scheduled to take place in 30 minutes–start to finish. Many of the presenters you’ve seen at our monthly meetings are scheduled to be “shop coaches”.  We’re excited to see this because for many of us, the ability to tweak every aspect of the product and the content that comes out was one of the primary advantages that drew us to the Arbortext platform.

Here are the details:

  • 30 minutes
  • 2nd and 4th Fridays
  • Shop Coaches are users
  • Calendar for all of 2011 has already been published
  • Beginner, intermediate, and advanced sessions
  • Nearly all the Arbortext products have been included

The first session is titled “Pop the Hood – Get Started with Arbortext Editor in 20 Minutes” presented by Lynn Hales. Lynn was one of the first people I met at my first AUGI and he was already an old-hand. Sign up today!

February 2011 Meeting Announcement: How DITA Transformed Content at Nikon Precision

Posted in meetings on January 1st, 2011 by lizfraley – Be the first to comment

Please join us online for our regular meeting:

“How DITA Transformed Content at Nikon Precision

Presented by Debra West-Maciaszek, Nikon Precision

Date: Saturday, 26 February 2011, 9:00-10:30 AM Pacific/US

Location: Online via GoToMeeting. You must Register to receive the GoToMeeting invite.

Cost: Free and open to all who wish to attend.

Topic

Nikon Precision Inc (NPI), located in the United States, serves as the sales and service support arm for the Nikon semiconductor manufacturing tools. All design and manufacturing occurs in Japan; therefore, all technical information originates in Japanese. Since NPI is the center for all English language documentation, there are not only technical hurdles but time constraints in getting technical information to our field service employees as well as our external customers.  And with photolithographic technologies advancing rapidly, NPI’s Documentation department was struggling.

In 2008, NPI’s Documentation department moved from monolithic, book-length technical materials (and ways of thinking) to using DITA and structured information for reuse. We transitioned from using unstructured FrameMaker to using Arbortext Editor/Styler/Architect and will be managing content with PTC’s Windchill PDMLink. Our technical information is delivered in two major forms: technical bulletins (used by field service eingineers (FSEs) and select customers; and training materials (used for internal and external training). We’re bringing in users who were responsible for processing technical bulletins for our FSEs in Word into the Documentation group. Soon, all our technical information – whether technical bulletin or training manual – will be created in DITA using Arbortext Editor.

Luckily, it wasn’t until after we’d implemented DITA that we experienced RIFs in our company. At this time, we can say that even with the small number of writers we have – and even though head count will not be increasing anytime in the near future, we will still be able to meet our deliverables because we’re using DITA.

We moved to structured authoring in DITA because:

  • Documentation department’s authoring and production tools had reached their usable limit
  • Manual, redundant activities are not value-add activities
  • Field service engineers (FSEs) struggled to find and use appropriate information
  • Reuse and repurposing of information was common, but labor-intensive and time-consuming

In this session, see why our transition to DITA has sparked intense interest in Japan, at our sister subsidiaries, to get the source materials in XML for better reuse and collaboration and how what we’ve done is spreading to other parts of the enterprise such as our Translation department as well as our Technical Training department.

About the Speaker

Debra West-Maciaszek is a Senior Information Architect/XML Production Manager at Nikon Precision, Inc. She joined NPI in October 1995 as a technical writer after leaving a career in academia where she taught technical writing and contemporary literature. Over the past 15 years, have served as technical writer, editor, supervisor, Documentation department manager. Debra implemented XML structured authoring / DITA in 2008. She is still the DITA evangelist at NPI. Despite transitioning out of managing people, Debra transitioned into managing the technical aspects of XML DITA in Spring 2009. She is currently implementing a content management system (Windchill PDMLink)  almost single-handedly. When asked, she’ll tell you she’s still learning about DITA.

Deb West-Maciaszek

Note

This meeting will be held online. You must RSVP to receive the GoToMeeting invite. After registering you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the Webinar.

Acknowledgments

This meeting is brought to you by the SF Bay Arbortext PTC/User Group.

We want to thank Single-Sourcing Solutions for coordinating our meeting logistics, administration, and for providing access to their GoToMeeting resources and conference bridge facilities.

Video posted: Under-the-hood multimedia publishing

Posted in video on November 11th, 2010 by lizfraley – Be the first to comment

Single-Sourcing Solutions posted the recording of the “Under-the-hood multimedia publishing” web session they held last month. It was pretty technical. Jean Kaplansky from PTC really went “under the hood” with Arbortext Digital Media Publisher, a part of Arbortext Publishing Engine. She showed how to:

  • Go under the hood – for a tour of Digital Media Publisher and Digital Media Consumer
  • Give it a new paint job – Making the DMC look and feel all yours with a Custom Frameset
  • Soup up your Searches – Configuring and Customizing end user Search functionality for the ultimate searching experience
  • Trick out your Dashboard – Giving users a way to interact with Digital Media Publisher content via basic web UI controls

Sign in to view the recording.