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At my previous job, we delivered WebHelp as part of the application (and
also had it available online). Our customers were banks, so I assume they
had pretty tight security, but I didn't hear of any problems. We used
RoboHelp and, as far as I can tell, if you just copy all the folders to a
hard drive, you can just double-click the index file and it works (maybe
you also need JavaScript enabled?).
Jen
Message: 16
> Date: Wed, 4 Dec 2013 14:53:43 -0500
> From: Hannah Drake <hannah -dot- drake -at- formulatrix -dot- com>
> To: Julie Stickler <jstickler -at- gmail -dot- com>, techwr-l
> <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com>
> Subject: Re: Hosted Help - server specs?
> Message-ID:
> <
> CAMSrMHubpSSqJofDwVFp0uXWxEx6_Kd0q9uQzv+QpR-bdB8eGA -at- mail -dot- gmail -dot- com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> We do, because of the first issue I mentioned -- half of our customers are
> online, half aren't (they don't have to be for some of our products) and
> some have very conservative IT people who don't like programs accessing the
> internet.
> CHMs seem easier to package than webhelp. But maybe there is something I
> don't know? It was the format they used when I got here in Jan, and I'm a
> newb to TW tools. I also assumed webhelp was meant to be hosted on a
> website.
>
> However, we are kicking around the idea of producing webhelp
> for at least one of our products
> (I also use Flare).
>
> Hannah L. Drake
>
> On 12/4/2013 2:49:24 PM, Julie Stickler <jstickler -at- gmail -dot- com> wrote:
> Also I find it kind of interesting that you talk about "the traditional
> CHM" as backup.
>
> I've been a technical writer for over a dozen years now, and I've never
> produced a CHM file. I've always produced some flavor of WebHelp. Are
> people still producing CHM files? (not to derail my own topic, but I'm
> curious).
>
>
> On Wed, Dec 4, 2013 at 2:11 PM, Hannah Drake wrote:
>
> > 1) Are all of your customers hooked up to the Internet? any high-security
> > customers? These kinds of things can cause hosted "help" problems.
> > 2) Most companies that have online help also do the traditional CHM as a
> > backup, so you can't completely get rid of in-product help.
>
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