If you've heard the recent news about how Adobe is going to move all
future releases of its Creative Suite software program bundle to the
cloud, and you're also a newspaper fan, especially of smaller community
newspapers, you should be concerned.
This will be an additional price burden for said community newspapers, and it's not yet clear how much.
Meanwhile,
Adobe's InDesign desktop publishing program took off as quickly as it
did, even though its predecessor, Pagemaker, was A: Pretty crappy; B:
Designed to work best on PCs, not Macs, because the competition, Quark
XPress, rightfully got a bad reputation, mainly in the customer service
field. It didn't respond well, or quickly, to queries or complaints,
first. Second, its updates didn't generally offer all new services
customers wanted, even after InDesign started gaining ground. And today,
Quark appears content to rest on its legacy background along with
"trapped overhead costs" of many newspapers, hoping they don't want to
spend the money to switch, if they haven't.
First, if you're a smaller newspaper, and you haven't switched, you shouldn't.
Second,
if you're still running pre-Intel Macs, and you're realizing you're
eventually going to have to face the upgrade wall, you have options.
That
includes buying Windows 7 PCs while they're still around, but
dirt-cheap. Quark 7 or 8 on Windoze works well. Depending on the size of
your paper, you may be able to buy a couple of copies of older versions
of Photoshop as a stand-alone and work with them.
Or,
look at Photoshop Elements. Or a non-Adobe photo-editing program.
Anything up to the size of a 7-day daily of less than 25K circ doesn't
have to go hog-wild on the latest and greatest version of Photoshop. (Or
the same for either Quark or InDesign.)
The latest
edition of Publishers' Auxiliary, the monthly newspaper for the
community newspaper industry from the National Newspaper Association,
goes into this issue with a lot of detail.
Here's their lede piece.
Anyway, if you have a small newspaper or small mag, explore your options.
And, this could lead more to consider other options.
Like
finally making the transition to digital only. Of course, that will be
digital in an HTML sense. Not an e-edition, as without either InDesign
or Quark, you're not creating PDFs, unless you want to try to creatively
downgrade to Microsoft Publisher. .
Seriously,
this is another option for newspapers and magazines. Depending on what
version of Creative Suite you have, how likely it is to get continued
Abode debug support and for how long, and how long it's going to be able
to handle files (like until Abode gets dickish and creates extensions
like "tifx" or "inddx" to force your hand) you have a few years to plan
details of a move to digital only.
And, if you have to
have creative tools, there's alternatives. If not Photoshop Elements,
there's GIMP, the German photo editing program Photoscape and more.
Anything halfway like Photoshop that has good work with layers and a
decent filter set is an option. Illustrator? Corel Draw's the easy
alternative. And, on InDesign? You can go back to Quark, or suck it up
enough to figure out a way to do something with Publisher if you have
to.
And, then, at some point, go web-only.
Plus,
there's Abode's lie, I believe, of saying they're doing this for a more
steady revenue stream. No, it's an anti-piracy measure, which will
probably just up the piracy wars.
Meanwhile, if it's
smart, Corel bundles PaintShop, Draw, and Word Perfect, and looks at
creating its own desktop publishing program to bundle with that. It
could aim at the lower end of the market, say something about as
bells-and-whistles as Quark version 3. A lot of non-daily papers would
find that whole suite fine if they've not upgraded to Office 2007 or
later on the Windoze side. Add in that Corel has basic-level video
editing software and more, per its
Wiki page and its
home page,
and there's potential indeed. Or it could buy Quark; after all, Corel
itself is a "built-up" company; all of its main products were acquired
by acquiring companies.
In short, Corel could become a
new "player" in multiple software games, and also give a lot of people a
new way to say "Eff you" to Adobe (and a bit of sideswipe "eff you" to
Microsoft in the process, and to Apple in a way, as well).