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Submitted by TomArah on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 06:00.
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VERDICT A modern makeover and new Flash authoring capabilities put a real spring in the step of the old timer.
QuarkXPress is one of the few truly revolutionary applications. Twenty years ago Quark took the simple hands-on approach to DTP pioneered by PageMaker, grafted on some high-end control, and reinvented the publishing industry. For over a decade QuarkXPress ruled the world of commercial print design but then threw it away and allowed Adobe InDesign to seize its publishing crown. Winning it back will demand something special – which is exactly what Quark is promising for this new release. The slogan for QuarkXPress 8 is: “Revolutionizing Publishing. Again.”
Submitted by TomArah on Fri, 06/06/2008 - 06:00.
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VERDICT With its incorporation of Flash-based media handling and new integration with Acrobat.com, the Acrobat platform fully embraces the internet age – at last.
Adobe Acrobat made its public debut back in 1991 and the PDF (Portable Document Format) it introduced was intended to become the universal format for design-rich, cross-platform electronic communication. The launch of the World Wide Web in the same year forced Adobe to radically revise its plans, but the Acrobat platform survived and eventually prospered by making itself indispensable to a whole host of workflows: documentation distribution, forms handling, secure exchange, searchable archiving, document review, commercial print and so on.
Submitted by TomArah on Wed, 05/14/2008 - 06:00.
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VERDICT Plenty of design-rich development power for producing desktop EXEs - but the new browser-hosted Silverlight applications promise more than they currently deliver.
Everyone’s computing experience depends on the richness of the applications that they use both on the desktop and on the web. However there’s always been a factor holding that richness in check: a fundamental and frustrating chasm between the designer working on application presentation and the developer working on application logic. Just over a year ago Microsoft unveiled its ground-up solution to the problem and now, with Expression Studio 2, it is building on those foundations.
Submitted by TomArah on Tue, 05/13/2008 - 06:00.
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VERDICT Minor tweaks leave Expression Media looking even more old-fashioned, under-powered and out of its depth.
Microsoft Expression Studio is designed to provide end users with the richest computing experience possible so advanced media handling should be key. Unfortunately this obvious requirement seemed to pass Microsoft by so that, rather than developing its own visual file manager, it was forced to buy in an existing third-party solution at the last moment. Worse the program it picked, iView MediaPro, was ugly, awkward and well past its sell-by date.
Submitted by TomArah on Tue, 05/13/2008 - 06:00.
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VERDICT Top-of-the-range video preparation and encoding together with Silverlight-based web playback should give Encoder a winning edge – but doesn’t quite.
There’s one media format that can make or break the computing experience – video. That’s why it’s so important to get the right balance between quality and file size and why both Adobe and Microsoft provide dedicated video encoders. Surprisingly, despite Adobe’s longstanding video experience, this is one area where Microsoft outscores its rival.
Submitted by TomArah on Tue, 05/13/2008 - 06:00.
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VERDICT Microsoft widens its support for web standards to include PHP, AJAX and Flash, but its primary focus remains on its own technologies: ASP.NET and now Silverlight.
The mission for the first release of Expression Web was clear: to lay the ghost of Microsoft’s unpopular FrontPage web authoring package. It largely succeeded by concentrating on providing standards-compliant support for the web’s core markup languages, (X)HTML and CSS. Apart from minor tweaks, such as the ability to automatically alphabeticize HTML properties, the handling of these two pillars is left unchanged and Expression Web 2 now seeks to widen its standards support.
Submitted by TomArah on Tue, 05/13/2008 - 06:00.
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VERDICT New interface and animation features and the ability to produce simple cross-platform Silverlight browser applications – too simple.
Expression Blend lies at the heart of Microsoft’s mission to make application development richer and more efficient as this is where you design the end user interface. XAML, Microsoft’s presentational markup language, is naturally central and Blend is the one Studio application where you can directly edit your XAML complete with full coding support. To code efficiently you really need to be able to see the effect of your changes as you work and Blend 2 adds the crucial Split view that makes this possible.
Submitted by TomArah on Tue, 04/01/2008 - 06:00.
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VERDICT New photo, 3D, text and web capabilities together with multiple page support and Xara’s unbeatable speed and price.
When Xara first appeared, back in 1995, it transformed the world of computer-based illustration. What made it revolutionary was that it was the first program fast enough to mix vector and bitmap handling in real time so enabling drawing software to move into new photorealistic and artistic territory. While never conquering the mainstream, Xara’s sheer speed, and the creative strengths that flow from it, have won the program many loyal fans over the years. So what does this latest release add to the mix?
Submitted by TomArah on Tue, 03/11/2008 - 06:00.
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VERDICT Flex steps up a gear with improved CS3 integration and data connection and new desktop capabilities.
Flash began life as a way for web designers to add simple vector animations to their web pages. In the twelve years since it has grafted on impressive content handling, interactivity and programmability and become the one must-have browser plug-in. In the process, and almost unnoticed, Flash has turned itself into an online computing platform with Flash content viewable by almost all internet users. Now Adobe is determined to fully capitalize on this platform by unleashing Flash’s ability to create full-blown, self-contained Rich Internet Applications (RIAs) – and to take the same power to the desktop (see AIR boxout).
Submitted by TomArah on Thu, 02/21/2008 - 07:00.
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VERDICT A wide range of PDF handling power at a fraction of the cost of Adobe Acrobat.
With its ability to create a fixed electronic representation of the printed page, Adobe’s PDF (Portable Document Format) is one of the most important file formats around acting as the standard medium for a whole host of tasks – document exchange, collaboration and review, print production, form handling, archiving and so on. Adobe would naturally like you to use its own Acrobat applications to take full advantage of the format, but there is an alternative: Nuance’s PDF Converter Professional.
Tom Arah is the webmaster of designer-info.com. He has been a professional designer working with computer software since 1987. He also offers training and consultancy and since 1997 has been the contributing editor covering design issues for PC Pro, the UK's biggest-selling (and best) computer monthly.
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