Quark: Mac OS X Not Ready
blankmange writes "NewsFactor reports that Quark's QuarkXPress is not quite up-to-snuff under Mac OS X." Sources in the article claim Mac OS X still isn't quite there in regard to printing, or predictability. That is, I suppose, you don't mind crashes as long as you know when they are going to happen and what is going to cause them.
There's Gimp, Sketch, Killustator (I forget what it's called now; I use Gnome). But where is the Quark clone?!
Software Wars
Just another reason to switch to InDesign...
Quark has milked its dominance in DTP for too long. Adobe tends to get its products polished by version 3, and its InDesign 2 product has received very positive reviews over QXP 5. The fact that QXP isn't supported natively in OS X is a nail in Quark's complacency coffin.
I'm not a big fan of QXP due to its history of annoying and serious bugs that caused all manner of stability and reliability problems. I do wish them success, but unfortunately they either have a lot of legacy issues or they really think that other companies won't be a problem while they take their sweet time to port. OS X's printing isn't perfect, but the fundamental PS support is there and works well enough, so that's a poor excuse.
Ask Lotus (1-2-3) about the consequences of complacency in the marketplace. Microsoft laughs all the way to the bank.
Vos teneo officium eram periculosus ut vos recipero is.
Sounds to me like they're making excuses while everybody else seems to be having no trouble making their products work under MacOS X.
I'm having trouble parsing that last sentence. The only interpretation I can think of that (roughly) fits with the grammer and my understanding of the world is that Quark users will be disapointed under Mac OS X, since they are used to having their systems crash and knowing that Quark caused it, and now when their system crashes they won't know for sure if Quark caused it.
If that's the case, I can fix the problem easily. Just print out this post and patse the following line somewhere where you can refer to it often:
You're welcome.
-- MarkusQ
Not too long ago, you needed both a floppy drive and a CD to install XPress 3.31(?) on your box. The CD contained all the app data, the floppy held the serialization info. (And there was yet another floppy for registration. You'd mail that disk directly to Quark after you were done.) Annoying, but you could live with it. But when Apple decided to go no-floppy across their entire product line -- ouch! Suddenly no one could install Quark on those beyoootiful new G3s for which they'd shelled out so much money. (Or at least not without buying some USB external floppy drives, which were hard-to-find early on.) And for months afterwards, Quark did next to nothing about this very obvious problem.
IIRC, they eventually settled it so you could send them a proof-of-purchase, your original program disks and a vial of blood harvested from a virgin under the full moon's light and get a CD-only version of the installer. But back at the time, it was a HUGE issue for a lot of bureaus and design shops.
Quark has always been the bain of designers and Prepress. The only reason Designers use it is because prepress house asked them to. The only reason prepress uses it is because years back it was the only app that could output color sep film right from the app and a few other things and Pagemaker sucked for prepress. Quark has always raped its customers with costly tech support, expensive upgrades and really bad bug fixes that caused more problems then they fixed. If fact the company I work at just 12 months ago officaily switched to Xpress 4 because of all the problems. I hope InDesign gets a following. I've looked at Xpress 5 but it's more of a 4.3 release in my opinion. Quark was in the right place at the right time and nothing else. Aldus dropped the ball with Pagemaker and fell on hard times when it had the opportunity to kill Quark. Any problems Quark has with Mac OS X is all Quark and bad programming on their part. The only app I have that crashes my OS 9 mac. The only reason I would want it on OS X is so I don't have to reboot all the time.
Umm....they do. You should do some research before you make posts. And besides, its not apple's fault that Quark isn't running on X.
The next generation GIMP is being built on the GEGL library which will handle multiple color spaces (think CMYK needed for pre-press output.) What we need is a serious line art/page layout app that does CMYK.
http://tinyurl.com/4ny52
If there is any company that is worse in terms of upgrades, stability problems, costs and user support than Quark (including, believe it or not Microsoft) I'ld like to hear it. The other posters here are dead on: The company has raped and abused it's monopoly in Prepress for years and doesn't care the slightest about customer opinion. However, Prepress houses and Printers have not helped at all because if there was ever a conservative, stuck_in_the_mud group of software users it's those people in Prepress. On the one hand they work in an industry that is already entrenched and has a set work flow and extremely tight deadlines to meet (worked there myself) and is thus unwilling to take the risks of trying out new processes that could entail stoppages in the process. On the other hand, this (and I've witnessed this myself) is a group that gets upset because InDesign has different keyboard shortcuts to XPress and then decides that InDesign is "too different" and switches back to XPress.
On top of this most editorial bureaus are stuck with that Pig of a software editorial system: CopyDesk, even though it is typical Quark slow, crashware. Adobe has an answer solution and hopefully this will stimulate the market somewhat.
I have my own beef with Quark as regards the mFactory mTropolis Multimedia Tool that Quark bought up in an attempt to get into that market when their own useless POS, XPress_coupled Immedia didn't get anywhere. They provided no marketing, no support and no development of the tool which then consequently and unsurprisingly didn't expand it's user base. The brilliance of mTropolis can not be overstated in that, even now, 5 years after Quark killed it, there is an *expanding* user group on yahoo groups.
After Quark killed the tool, the user base tried various methods to get the source or at least a development licence from Quark to no avail. Apart from the one million dollar price tag that Quark put on the dead code (which the user group could obviously not afford) they stipulated that "all negative comments pertaining to Quark" must cease before they would think about it because there was such an outcry.
I do *not* wish that company well.
If you don't work in the industry (apologies to those that do), try to understand...we don't use desktop equipment, we use ultra-high-end hardware solutions from Heidelberg, AGFA, ABDick, Kodak and the like that don't change at the rate of OS architecture. Most of us have highly involved workflows that work, and we aren't going to change for the sake of changing, it has to be better - not different. OSX, while I think it's awesome and can't wait to implement it here in our business, is no where near ready for my industry. You can get files to print to your Epson? Rock on! But there is no way it's going to interface with the Harlequin RIP software sitting on the NT box (don't bother, it wasn't my decision!) that is connected to the ABDick digital plate maker. And that output device prints 99% of the plates we put on the press.
As for the Quark vs. Adobe(PM, InD) argument, that could be changing. Adobe burned some bridges by stating there was not going to be future updates on Pagemaker and then shoveling that POS InDesign 1.0 to us. But InDesign 2.0 is very cool! I like it alot and I'm using it more. Quark Killer? I don't think so. But it might split my project load with Quark.
I use hammers to pound nails, and screwdrivers to turn screws. I'll use the software that works best for the job at hand...and none of them do everything perfectly, so save religion for church!
--
I'm sorry, but your opininion seems to be wrong.
I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
I was a devoted QuarkXPress user from version 1; it was so much better (mostly more stable and better at printing) than PageMaker (then from Aldus), even given early limitations such as the inability to copy and past boxes. But three things happened to make me abandon the application. (1) Poor customer service. I got tired of paying US$25 every time I wanted a simple question answered. And though I was honest enough to buy my own copy for personal use, I felt I was always treated with suspicion. While studying in the UK, I upgraded to System 7.5 and found that my copy of QuarkXPress would no longer work. I called support and they threatened to revoke my license since I was not "authorized" to run on the British system. This struck me as draconian. (2) Exhorbitant upgrade pricing. I could "cross-grade" to InDesign for less than the cost of the upgrade to the latest version of QuarkXPress. Quark is the only company I ever saw that considered a PowerPC version of their software an upgrade in and of itself; so one had to buy a "double upgrade" to PPC and the latest version. As I recall this was over US$600. (3) OS X support. For anyone paying attention, as soon as the details of Carbon became common knowledge the troubles Quark would have porting to OS X should have been obvious. QuarkXPress has always used non-standard controls; even version 4 (not sure about 5) used a faked/hacked System 7 scroll bar appearance even on OS 8/9. It seemed to me that there were so many aspects of the program like this that "carbonizing" it would actually require significant rewriting, unlike most apps that used standard toolbox routines. Unfortunately it looks like the hesitation to go to InDesign is going to be a major drag on moving Apple's installed base in one of its most important markets (pre-press) to OS X. But I'm sure it will happen.
Wow, too bad they dumped InDesign before they figured out that InDesign supports Quark keyboard shortcuts as a preference option.
-- thinkyhead software and media
I've never been able to get down wit' Quark. I don't do a lot of DTP, but at one time I did and at that time I was all about some Aldus PageMaker 5.0. The first couple of revisions after Adobe bought it were okay as well. Nowadays whenever I want to do any DTP I find myself staring at the same battered old copy of Aldus PageMaker 5.0 running under Wine's excellent Win16 support on my FreeBSD box. =P
Brandon D. Valentine
Quark as a program does not use any modern features that photoshop/office 2001 uses.
It's still got the same open and save boxes as we used when we had 80s punkrocker haircuts.
It needs more upgrading than most apps to work on OS X.
Sig (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
More and more Presses are accepting PDF files these days, so it's not as big of an issue if they don't carry InDesign. More troublesome is if you receive ads from clients that are in Quark, and you have to maintain both programs (and, consequently, both environments), just to be able to accept the ads.
Also, there's the consideration of the various plugins (or XTensions, if you are speaking specifically of Quark), as well as applescripts and the like. You lose whatever you had for customized workflow when you switch, so there has to be time to get everything working in a reasonably similar manner before you switch. If you have a database driven workflow, breaking that is seriously going to suck. On the other hand, chances are that Quark will only upgrade 5 to OS X, not 4, so it will break all of the plugins anyways.
Finally, there's the budget. In my case, I'm not going to be able to afford all of the upgrades until next year, chances are. I'm not in a big rush to go to OS X, but it's definitely in the plans. I want to stop the computer from crashing. If an app drops out here and there, no big deal, but if I can reduce the number of restarts per day to close to 0, then I will consider that a huge win. The question is, which will be the better program when it's time to switch? Even given my time frame, I bet it'll be InDesign.
=Brian
There is nothing so good that someone, somewhere, will not hate it.
What's all that stuff good for? Almost all printed matter that I come across that is actually worth reading is black-and-white, has a simple layout, simple fonts, and simple typesetting. High-end typesetting seems like an obsession akin to high-end sports cars or expensive antiques. And for high-quality color images, I rather go on-line.
Quark is a ugly, horrid, slow, piece of junk software.
But what else is there?
I wouldn't touch it with an iMac on a 10 foot pole if I had a tanzanian devil monkey gnawing through my arm.
-----
"Cogito Eggo Sum: I think, therefore, waffle."
I thought that the developers did manage to scare up something like 750k of that 1 million, Quark still said no.
To this day, that was the best damn app I have used for any purpose on any platform.
I feel sorry for the mTrop developers who got sucked into working for Quark. (Wonder if any of them are still there)
Quark has no soul.
I really must wonder, why does quark sound more and more like Micro$oft? They seem to think that the world will march to their tune. I hate to inform them, but it wont. Apple is commited to osX. It IS their new OS. And, working for an apple specialist, I preach that fact every day. At some point in the future, just like with previous versions of the os, apple will stop shipping 9 on machines. then, 9 will stop being updated. When 98% of the application base is osX compliant, 9 will be useless. Christ, I've been 100% osX for several months now. I havent loaded 9 at all. Now, realize that being a service provider and a sales consultant, my machine has to be able to do everything. what a surprise, it does! Quark has to make a decision, fish or cut bait. they either write their app for osX or they call it a day. Everyone else made the smart choice. And, when presented with a stable environment that, most people have made the obvious choice. No, I wont go back to 9. Niether will apple. Quark can either make the switch or get left behind. Adobe knows this and I'm sure they'll be glad to pick up the slack.
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