On TechRepublic: Five super-secret features in Windows 7
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By David Becker
Posted on ZDNet News: Jan 5, 2004 1:30:00 PM

Adobe Systems unveiled a conversion strategy Monday for customers still using its orphaned PageMaker page design and layout application.

It has been more than two years since Adobe last updated PageMaker, meaning the application has yet to acquire native support for Apple Computer's Mac OS X operating system. Instead, Adobe has focused resources on InDesign, a more robust design and layout application that has slowly been gaining ground against market leader QuarkXPress.

But many PageMaker users have remained loyal to the product, especially people who don't do graphics work full time but occasionally have to produce fliers or other printed material as part of their job, said Jo Ann Buckner, senior product manager for Adobe.

Those customers--primarily in business and education--have become accustomed to PageMaker's tools and don't do layout work often enough to justify learning a whole new way of working. Yet they'd like to have access to new features in other Adobe products, such as OS X support and compatibility with Adobe's Creative Suite package.

"Since we released the Creative Suite, a lot of PageMaker customers have been asking, 'What does this mean for me?'" Buckner said.

Adobe's answer is a new version of InDesign--InDesign CS PageMaker Edition, for both Windows and Mac OS X systems--that outfits InDesign with major PageMaker tools such as the InBooklet publishing package and Story Editor text editor. The new edition also includes numerous templates, tutorials and shortcuts to guide PageMaker users and can read and manipulate PageMaker files.

"We want to make it very clear for users, this is how you did it in PageMaker, this is how you do it in InDesign," Buckner said. "We think that with just a couple hours of experience, PageMaker users will be doing everything they used to do in PageMaker."

InDesign CS PageMaker Edition is set to go on sale in the first quarter of 2004, priced at $349 for the standalone version or $49 for a PageMaker Plug-In Pack that incorporates PageMaker tools into an existing copy of InDesign. The new edition will also be included in a new configuration of the Creative Suite package, which includes Photoshop and Illustrator.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 15 Talkback(s)
Usually, in that case...
we would get and use files from the creator application, almost invariably QuarkXPress with placed EPS and raster images. We wouldn't let the designers try to "prep" the files for our imagesetters bef... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Yen_z Posted on: 01/06/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Goodbye Adobe....  Joe Blow_z | 01/04/04
Yeah, right...  Fred Fredrickson | 01/05/04
Or just keep what you have  j.m.galvin | 01/05/04
Yes Indeed!  KeithRisler | 01/05/04
You are still facing the issue  rbethell | 01/05/04
Printers?  Joe Blow_z | 01/05/04
Sounds like spin  KeithRisler | 01/05/04
Code does go obsolete, of course it does...  rbethell | 01/06/04
Far overclaiming the usefulness of Acrobat  rbethell | 01/05/04
I would disagree here...  Yen_z | 01/05/04
Ah, but in the ad business PDF *is* standard  rbethell | 01/06/04
Usually, in that case...  Yen_z | 01/06/04
Way Too Costly!  KeithRisler | 01/05/04
Not Yet!  Fred Feltmann | 01/06/04
PM-ID Transition?  blackmarlin | 01/06/04

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here