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QuarkXPress 6 For Mac OS X

MikeXpop writes "Apple's front page shows that QuarkXPress has been announced for Mac OS X and will be available as of next week. Anyone else getting a flashback to when Diablo II was in stores?"

411 comments

  1. Sweet by krisp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Finally. I work at a newspaper and the fact that there was no QuarkExpress support for OSX has kept us from updating our macintoshes. We can finally get back up-to-date.

    1. Re:Sweet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hehe..too true

  2. Double-take? by captnjameskirk · · Score: 5, Funny

    Anyone else getting a flashback to when Diablo II was in stores No, but I got whiplash when I saw the $899.95 pricetag! :)

    1. Re:Double-take? by JohnTheFisherman · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, but I got whiplash when I saw the $899.95 pricetag! :)

      Damn, no wonder Diablo II didn't sell well. That's steep.

    2. Re:Double-take? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hey, at least it's priced under $900.

    3. Re:Double-take? by rigmort · · Score: 1
      List price is $1045. See this press release.

      It better be covered by my company's Service Plus contract for 75 users. They already moved their programming and tech support to India!

    4. Re:Double-take? by Master+Bait · · Score: 3, Funny
      Hey, what's a few hundred bucks when they've added all those awesome features like the Automatic Star Button right on the toolbar and the ability to save your layout as an exceptionally lame static-sized web page? And not to mention an insanely great pallette of web safe colors!

      I'm ready with my credit card because I know that Operators are Standing By!

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    5. Re:Double-take? by stilwebm · · Score: 1

      and the ability to save your layout as an exceptionally lame static-sized web page

      QuarkXPress is a tool for precisely placing text and images. Using relative sizing would completely break that. Quark users will not be using Quark to design web pages, but perhaps to preview web designs or preview print pieces on the web. Quark does not expect nor intend to gain share in the web design area.

    6. Re:Double-take? by forel · · Score: 2, Funny

      No flashbacks here, but I had to doublecheck to see if DukeNukem Forever was out. The 3drealms website says no, but I'm emptying my cache just to be sure.

      --
      -- What I don't have in intelligence, I make up for in a lack thereof.
    7. Re:Double-take? by MouseR · · Score: 1

      they've added all those awesome features like the Automatic Star Button

      Next time you receive your weekly store flyers, pay attention to the pricing backdrop styles. They're all star bursts.

      I made a small fortune coding and selling an XPress extension called Punch XT that made stylized in-line text outlines and in-text image texturing, automatic price formatting and shadowing.

      The No. 1 feature requested feature was star burst effects.

    8. Re:Double-take? by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      Next time you receive your weekly store flyers, pay attention to the pricing backdrop styles. They're all star bursts.

      I admit I'm a snotty-nosed book designer, but I remember working at a shopper back in the old days when we used to make all those starbursts by hand with an exacto knife.

      I made a small fortune coding and selling an XPress extension called Punch XT that made stylized in-line text outlines and in-text image texturing, automatic price formatting and shadowing. The No. 1 feature requested feature was star burst effects.

      Good for you! I hope your success cointinues!

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    9. Re:Double-take? by donmontalvo · · Score: 1

      The Quark Store price is $944.

    10. Re:Double-take? by Dodger73 · · Score: 1

      No, but I got whiplash when I saw the $899.95 pricetag! :) Being the #1 desktop publishing package, they think they can ask that price. Always have. Always will. And it being the #1 package proves them right ;) 900 bucks is nothing out of the ordinary for pro design software - you can easily spend several grand for software on a single machine for a design or publishing studio.

  3. This was by CptChipJew · · Score: 4, Funny

    really the last huge Mac application that wasn't ported to OS X. Now the brand new Macs at my school's newspaper can actually use the OS they were meant to run.

    I don't recall the name of the guy who runs Quark, but he was always known for talking about how the Mac is "a dying platform". He can also be seen making first post's to slashdot stories regarding BSD and Netcraft.

    --
    Vonal Declosion
    1. Re:This was by Dr.Evil · · Score: 1

      His name is Fred Ebrahimi.

      --
      Right...
    2. Re:This was by iwnbs · · Score: 1

      ...and he can be seen on MTV having billiards dropped 8 stories into his crotch.

      --
      Computer Geek Proverb: Linux is only free if your time is worthless.
    3. Re:This was by andrewski · · Score: 0, Troll

      I don't really think they ported it to OS X. They probably ported it using Carbon, which runs on OS X. I'm sure we'll see the myriad of problems that we usually do with casually programmed (read: shitty) Carbon ports including:

      - Broken on UFS (just like Maya and about 33% of the 'OS X Compatable' games on the market)

      - Broken color support (won't integrate with the new, proper OS X workflow)

      - Messed up font display. Carbon apps generally have crappy font handling.

      - Inability to use the unified OS X font system.

      - Tendency to eat as much CPU as possible, even when idle.

      - Always-on-top modal dialog boxen. I don't know why the FUCK Apple provides the ability to put your dialog box on top of everything on the screen INCLUDING OTHER APPS, but this is a broken, messed up feature that I catch Carbon programmers using far too often.

      I'm sure I missed some points, but I bet this product will be so fucking beta it'll make your rectum bleed to use it. I can just imagine that the whole 'team' (probably outsourced to half of the Eastern Hemisphere for $.12 per hour) being under so much pressure to just compile SOMETHING that RUNS on OS X that making a DTP app was probably like 12th on their list of things to do right there under 'make it Web enabled.'

      God help you all, and save you from this horrible program.

    4. Re:This was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -1 Troll

      Try to maintain a positive outlook for Jesus's sake.

      Quark is a good product, and needs to run on a good OS.

    5. Re:This was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And why the fuck would you want to run UFS on a desktop machine? Utterly stupid. OS X is designed to use HFS+. UFS support is largely a byproduct of having BSD code, and is barely recommended more than having your data disk formatted FAT32. UFS is much slower than HFS+ in OS X.

      Don't even cry to me about case sensitivity. That's the stupidest thing. Files only have names so that HUMANS can easily deal with them. Otherwise they'd all have numbers -- it's all the same to the computer, right? Case sensitivity is completely unnecessary, and if you need it, then you aren't naming your files intelligently. Why would a person need files called Readme, README, readme, ReadMe, and ReAdMe all in the same directory? File names are useless then because how the fuck do you know the difference? No, just name them "Read Me First" and "Read After Installing" etc.

      Do you have a real reason for using UFS, or is it because HFS+ is a "toy" filesystem and you feel so elite using UFS? I'm geniunely curious and will happily eat my words if presented with a reasonable argument.

    6. Re:This was by random_static · · Score: 1
      And why the fuck would you want to run UFS on a desktop machine?

      nonono, for this sort of article you need an "Apple is dying" troll. yes, i know there's a Mach somewhere underneath OSX, but that's just not enough to run a "BSD is dying" troll in the apple department of /. - please keep the tired old /. troll subjects straight!

    7. Re:This was by andrewski · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Some of the bugs that have been encountered on OS X only happen on HFS+. I have a feeling that their VFS module for HFS+ still has some interesting bugs left within. Again, speed is about equal for both formats, at least on my machine, and again I am coming from Linux and Free / NetBSD here so don't assume I need your crufty app anyway! For fuck's sake, the TCP stack is 'largely a byproduct of having BSD code' along with a good portion of the rest of the system.

      Don't even cry to me about case sensitivity. That's the stupidest thing. Files only have names so that HUMANS can easily deal with them. Otherwise they'd all have numbers -- it's all the same to the computer, right?

      Are you fucking retarded? They already do! They call these 'numbers' inodes. Maybe you should grab a pen and some paper here and write some fo this down. Files have one or more names so programs can interact with them. Files can be manipulated by more than one program in the real world. Case sensitivity does indeed have uses. If you don't like having to use caps, then don't name your file with caps! You are a whiny little bitch, ain't ya?

      No, I have a real reason for using UFS. It has a mature implementation on OS X, and I experience no strangeness from it on the network with other boxen. It is also a relatively long-lived filesystem, whereas a HFS+ partition will tend to accumulate unused but UNALLOCATABLE disk space over time, thus keeping slime like Symantec in business.

      HFS+ isn't a toy filesystem exactly, but it needs some serious overhaul. It was almost as if it were designed with the occasional reformat as a necessary design choice.

      Since the filesystem layer is fully virtualized, we shall see newer and more interesting formats than HFS+ in future versions of OS X.

      Hopefully.

    8. Re:This was by paradesign · · Score: 1

      havent people switched to indesign yet?

      --
      I want 2D games back.
    9. Re:This was by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      the next OS X release (panther) fixes (or at least improves) the carbon font problems.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    10. Re:This was by larry+bagina · · Score: 1
      why don't you create your own quark? Or something equivalent and make it compatable with Quark?

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    11. Re:This was by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1
      UFS2 writes to the disk synchronously and supports journaling. I do not know if HFS+ does journaling because I do not use macosx.

      Anyway UFS2 is one of the most robust filesystems out there. It can support semi async. i/o with softupdates( this is on FreeBSD and I am not sure if macosX has this). Journaling like capabilities are supported with softupdates as well.

      HFS+ may not be appropriate for an Xserve. I would prefer something robust.

      HFS+ may be totally async with lazy write buffer cacheing which can cost serious data corruption if unplugged unproperly. UFS2 with softupdates does not suffer from this.

    12. Re:This was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was not.

    13. Re:This was by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 1
      HFS+ on MacOSX "workstation" (ie not the Server Edition) does not officially have journaling. However, enabling it is a matter of opening up a terminal window and typing one line.

      HFS+ is a pretty stable fs. Dunno about ufs but since it creates problems with a lot of osx software, I am led to believe that it is not exactly the fs of choice for that particular OS.

      --
      Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
    14. Re:This was by Uber+Banker · · Score: 1

      You are a faeces.

      I am a Penguin.

      Penguins have faeces.

      Your are created by me.

      Your thoughts are created by me.

      For some time, my thoughts revolved around you.

      But you are the faeces of reply.

    15. Re:This was by darien · · Score: 1

      Speaking as a design contractor, I have - and every shop I go into that hasn't, I do my best to persuade to change. Some already have plans to do so (e.g. Elsevier Science, publishers of The Lancet). I can't think of anything QuarkXPress 5 did that InDesign 2 didn't do better; and though version 6 adds a few of the more embarrassingly missing features (e.g. full-res previews, multi-level undo), I figure there are still four absolutely killer reasons to ditch Quark and use InDesign:

      1. Its ability to natively create PDFs quickly and without fuss. The Quark method (create a PS file, then send it to Acrobat Distiller) is far more complicated to set up, far slower, and demands ridiculous amounts of spare disk space - many hundreds of megabytes for a document that will eventually end up as a 15Mb PDF.

      2. Perfect support for Illustrator and Photoshop files. After all, 99% of people who use QuarkXPress use these two programs to fix up their images before placing them. It's bliss just to be able to use the original .PSDs and .AIs, and not having to save flat TIFF versions with 1-bit alpha channels for Quark's benefit.

      3. The ability to set each item's blending mode and transparency individually. Heaven.

      4. The simple fact that Quark are a slow, arrogant, customer-contemptuous company, still too used to being the only game in town, and in need of a sharp shock.

  4. Flashback? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Anyone else getting a flashback to when Diablo II was in stores?

    Ah yes.. because when I think of QuarkExpress, I immediately think of slaying demons, collecting precious gems, and casting magic spells on vicious great spiders.

    1. Re:Flashback? by tenton · · Score: 5, Funny

      You obviously have no idea how it is in the publishing industry. :P

    2. Re:Flashback? by jub · · Score: 1

      well, you can send an alien out to destroy your text box... wonder if they still have that in 6?

      maybe it'll be Marvin the Martian this time, swooping across the screen in 3d - that'd be worth $899.

      production work can be tedious.

      actually, for $899, all it has to do is not crash and not write corrupt documents, and they'll sell a million the first week.

    3. Re:Flashback? by Maxime+Lefrancois · · Score: 1

      Anyone else getting a flashback to when Diablo II was in stores?

      Ah yes.. because when I think of QuarkExpress, I immediately think of slaying demons, collecting precious gems, and casting magic spells on vicious great spiders.



      Yeah, tell me about it; those annoying bugs

    4. Re:Flashback? by mrleemrlee · · Score: 1

      Maybe it has a new, improved, hi-res BOMB!

      Seriously, I've used Quark for years and years, and I've never met a program that crashed so much, at least in version 3.3, which was around FOREVER.

      And in fairness, I use 4.1 every day now (though on a PC), and it never crashes.

  5. quick fyi.... by greenskyx · · Score: 5, Informative

    For all you who aren't Mac ppl, this is a refrence to the fact that Diablo for mac was released WAYYYYYYYYYY after the PC version was. In this case Quark for OSX should have been out a long time ago....

    1. Re:quick fyi.... by Rosyna · · Score: 1

      No, he specifically says Diablo II. It was released about a week after the PC released then later put on as a hybrid CD. It was a big day for Apple since it was the first major game released this way and therefore posted ALL over the website.

    2. Re:quick fyi.... by feldsteins · · Score: 1

      I think it's cheap to bring up a "Mac users waited a lot longer than PC gamers for that hot game" scenario in the case of Quark and OS X. I mean other than the "long time" part, what does it have to do with anything? Did PC users get QuarkXPress 6 a while back and nobody notice it?

      And FYI, Quark probably makes half their money off us Mac users. Half. Some folks here appear to not know this.

      Cheap shot, editors. Very cheap.

      --
      You like your Macintosh better than me, don't you Dave? Dave? Can you hear me Dave?
    3. Re:quick fyi.... by Razzak · · Score: 1

      Uhhh... no its not. It references "Diablo II" which shipped for Mac 2 weeks after the PC version.

    4. Re:quick fyi.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, that was a quote from the submission, and had nothing to do with editors. Doesn't Quark have any support for italics that you can't recognize the quoted submission from editorial text?

  6. diablo II by iate138 · · Score: 5, Funny

    sure, because i always equate decapitating the undead with aligning text! bring me the +5 ringlets of helvetica!

  7. Re:Huh? by SweetAndSourJesus · · Score: 5, Informative

    Quark 6 was promised around that time. About two or three years ago.

    It wouldn't surprise me at all if their payroll company had to make out a million checks to "monkey." It's been so damned long that Quark 6 became statistically inevitable.

    --

    --
    the strongest word is still the word "free"
  8. Too late for Quark... by drgroove · · Score: 5, Informative

    Adobe's inDesign has effectively gobbled up all of the old Quark marketshare, since it has had OSX presence for over a year now... Quark is going to have to play *serious* catch-up. inDesign also incorporates all of the key Photoshop filters - drop shadows, transparency... making it a very simple thing to keep your design all in one app, w/o having to switch back & forth to Photoshop to get your filters. Quark made a *huge* mistake by taking this long to get to OSX.

    1. Re:Too late for Quark... by deadsaijinx* · · Score: 4, Interesting

      can you prove that inDesign has gobbled up the marketshare? Seems to me that Quark still has quite the loyal base, especially since companies don't update their computers as compulsively as individuals.

      --
      YOU SUCK BALLS!
    2. Re:Too late for Quark... by cheezus · · Score: 1

      I remember using Adobe PageMaker way back... is inDesign just its new name?

      --
      /bin/fortune | slashdotsig.sh
    3. Re:Too late for Quark... by Xzzy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > Adobe's inDesign has effectively gobbled up all of
      > the old Quark marketshare, since it has had OSX
      > presence for over a year now...

      You're failing to account for all the older prepress houses that pretty much cut their teeth using quark, and are still lagging behind using older installs that the last version ran on.

      It's been years since I've had any contact with this industry but I know these people, this is how they work. Once they fixate on a given piece of software, that's all they use. The arguments of the virtues between pagemaker and quark got downright nasty sometimes.. a lot like the unix vi/emacs debate.

      I think this new release will do just fine. Yeah the impact won't be as big as it could have been, but it's hardly to the point that quark is doomed.

    4. Re:Too late for Quark... by Karamchand · · Score: 3, Informative

      Around PageMaker version 6.5 Adobe planned to more or less abandon PageMaker in favor of InDesign.
      But some time ago they seem to have changed their mind and released PageMaker 7.0. They're trying to position InDesign a bit more in the professional area while PageMaker should satisfy semi-pro.

    5. Re:Too late for Quark... by maxume · · Score: 1

      Nope. Completely new product. They even released Pagemaker 7 after the release of inDesign 1.5, which was the first usable release of inDesign...

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    6. Re:Too late for Quark... by Exitthree · · Score: 1

      No, fortunately. Here's an analogy. InDesign is to Quark as Quark was to Pagemaker.

    7. Re:Too late for Quark... by Dirk+Pitt · · Score: 1

      Hmm... this is based on the assumption that most of the desktop pub market migrated to OSX. I don't have numbers, but the half dozen or so ad houses I know have stayed back at OS9 so they could run Quark, but YMMV.

    8. Re:Too late for Quark... by rigmort · · Score: 2, Informative
      InDesign hasn't gobbled up all of Quark's marketshare. There are a lot of companies out there who have QuarkXPress deeply entrenched in their workflow. I'm talking $millions to make the switch to InDesign.

      You have to remember that printing and publishing people are under hot deadlines. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."

      In my opinion, this is more of a Good Thing to Apple than Quark.

    9. Re:Too late for Quark... by Morgahastu · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My school used Quark and kept OS 9 arround just for quark but when it came down to it they really wanted to move to OS X for next fall and they will. When they started planning it there was no word of Quark coming out of OS X so they've already bought Adobe inDesign licenses. Too late for Quark.

    10. Re:Too late for Quark... by SandSpider · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Though true that this is how many design houses work, I can say that it's unnecessary. My publication had been working on quark for its entire Electronic Life, and we converted over to InDesign for X. There was grumbling at first, but nobody would consider going back to Quark now. It took about 2 weeks to get back up to speed on an 80-100 page weekly publication. It was an easy, easy transition.

      The questions that will really define Quark's continued success in the marketplace are: 1) Will it work; 2) if it doesn't, is Quark still going to act like they're the only game in town. If 1 is no (likely) and 2 is yes (also likely), then Quark is going to lose a lot of people. I mean, when is the last time you saw a .0 version of Quark actually work?

      Me, I'm happy with having been using InDesign for OS X for the past 8 or so months, and I can't wait for the next version.

      =Brian

      --
      There is nothing so good that someone, somewhere, will not hate it.
    11. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Quark made a *huge* mistake by taking this long to get to OSX.

      Quark has...problems....

      I worked at quark back in the late 90s. And believe it or not, they had internal versions of XPress running on Max OSX back then -- not Aqua versions, but running versions of XPress nonetheless.

      The thing is...they fired everyone. Shortly after I left, I found out that the company fired nearly every one of it's most knowledgable developers. Senior staff. People who wrote the original XPress code. And then, a few years ago, Tim Gill sold his share to his partner, Fred Ibrahimi. And that was pretty much it for the Quark software developer. Tim was responsible for feeding and care of the techies, so to speak, and when he left, I know that a lot of people were concerned for their jobs.

      For kicks, I just took a look at the Quark jobs webpage. Turns out, they have two jobs available in Denver -- one product management, and one product analyst. However, they have nearly 20 jobs available in Quark India.

      I'll let you draw your own conclusions.

      Quark's mismanagement of it's technical staff is what has led to these abysmal release schedules, and they don't seem to be getting any better. It's kind of a shame. Quark was a fun company.

    12. Re:Too late for Quark... by stilwebm · · Score: 1

      You are correct, the most prepress industry still accepts QuarkXPress 4.x but not inDesign, and many don't even accept Quark 5. Most QuarkXPress users only used version 5 when they ran out of 4.x license and could only by version 5.

    13. Re:Too late for Quark... by Moridineas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't agree with the overall theme of your message--Quark f*cked up bigtime, they got lazy with their near monopoly of desktop publishing software and is a bad spot now. But to say it "has effectively gobbled up all of the old Quark marketshare" is absolutely false. Totally disregarding the huge number of shops that don't change because they don't have to (unlike computers geeks who upgrade for fun) the vast number of Quark XTensions are a huge factor too. Is there a replacement for www.kytek.com's AutoPage, for instance?

      I think for the non-professional Adobe has probably done an amazing job of dominating quark--but there is a large portion of the market that hasn't switched, and isn't able to.

    14. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      s/by/buy

    15. Re:Too late for Quark... by jub · · Score: 1

      They're gobbling up all of the new license sales, that's probably true. And they're getting quite a few people who are (rightly) losing confidence in Quark.

      I'll bet that the biggest group of Quark users have just been waiting patiently. People in the internet world wouldn't believe how slow and reluctant print users are to upgrade. There are just too many variables for most people to leap into a different production platform.

      In our shop, our manager has been very interested in moving our production to an XML-to-PDF-based 'blind' publishing system (no wysiwyg, preview as pdf). This is a change that would turn our whole work flow upside down; designers, writers, editors, etc. BUT, she doesn't want to get a copy ID2 to test it out. That would be too disruptive.

      There are print people very happily working away in OS9 with Quark 3.3, cranking out thousands of pages. They don't care about Unix or its benefits, they care that their fonts and graphics make it to the page EXACTLY as they designed them on EVERY page.

      I think once it's proven that Quark 6 is stable, and once 6.01 comes out, maybe 6 months after that Apple will start selling some serious numbers of new pro machines.

    16. Re:Too late for Quark... by drgroove · · Score: 1

      > Adobe's inDesign has effectively gobbled up all of > the old Quark marketshare, since it has had OSX > presence for over a year now... You're failing to account for all the older prepress houses that pretty much cut their teeth using quark, and are still lagging behind using older installs that the last version ran on. It's been years since I've had any contact with this industry but I know these people, this is how they work. Once they fixate on a given piece of software, that's all they use. The arguments of the virtues between pagemaker and quark got downright nasty sometimes.. a lot like the unix vi/emacs debate. I think this new release will do just fine. Yeah the impact won't be as big as it could have been, but it's hardly to the point that quark is doomed.

      You're absolutely right. Print houses do standardize, and are generally loathe to change from their positions. What I should have stated was that new potential Quark clients purchased inDesign in Quark's stead, as there was no Quark/OSX option at the time they needed to make their purchases... at least, that was the experience I had twice in a row, at 2 completely separate companies, not to mention conversations w/ associates in the print industry who had adopted inDesign in favor of Quark...

    17. Re:Too late for Quark... by Xzzy · · Score: 1

      Heh I totally forgot about the file format dependencies these people develop.. if you couldn't submit a file in a format that shop X wanted, you were pretty much SOL.

      Of course, lots of them were willing to rebuild your files to the in-house format.. for a fee. ;)

      I sometimes miss the smell/sounds of a running press, but I really DON'T miss file format wars.

    18. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My printshop has only ever had ONE indesign file in the whole time its been out. 75% of our files are quark

    19. Re:Too late for Quark... by eclectic4 · · Score: 1

      Absolutely.

      A print house will wait 'til the bugs are worked out for SURE.

      When you can literally lose tens of thousands of dollars an hour from a disrupted work-flow, believe me, caution isn't nearly a strong enough word to describe the print industry. Quark 3.3 and OS 9 work great with full Apple script support (I know, 6 also has this too, but...), and therefore won't be switching UNTIL they see that there is true production increases with the new app (which I believe ther would be reading the release), AND all bugs are worked out, which may be 6.2...3...4 7.0, who knows.

      --

      "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
    20. Re:Too late for Quark... by slycrel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It has for our company. We make phone book publishing software, and we are currently porting our Quark plugins to indesign. And that means ~50-75 of our customers heading that direction as well. Not to mention some of our customers have been using indesign ahead of us for some time now and are clamoring for this.

    21. Re:Too late for Quark... by Lvcian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And this is a good reason why you can't count Quark 6 as a sure-fire winner yet. QXP6 won't save down to anything past Quark 5, unless they've changed something since the last beta I saw. That means to output a file to many pubs/print shops, you'll need to save that Quark 6 file down to 5, open it up again in 5, save it down to 4 and pray that nothing happened to your layout. Hell, I've got some pubs that won't accept anything but a Quark 3.32 file!

      Combine this with the fact that Quark has re-written their print engine for the second time in two releases (and we all now how well recieved 5 was) so who knows what kind of PS will come out of that, and my decision to switch to ID seems pretty good. Besides which I can set my Adobe rep on any pub that has problems. All I get from my Quark rep is a message saying that her voice mail box is full.

    22. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Adobe's inDesign has effectively gobbled up all of the old Quark marketshare....

      Not exactly. There's lots of print shops that only accept documents in Quark format.

    23. Re:Too late for Quark... by andrewski · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have always thought that tis is a messed up way of doing business. I have always viewed a print shop like this: If they couldn't accept a file from me, THEY were SOL. After all, there are good printers out there who will work with you, and not against you.

      I have always laughed at the sneering record-store guy attitude that many print houses, and other businesses in fact, employees take. It's like this - I can always spend my money at your competitor, so don't make me!

    24. Re:Too late for Quark... by angeles13 · · Score: 1

      InDesign hasn't completely taken over Quark's marketshare. It will probably not happen until Adobe starts writing pagination and sep software for the various imagesetters/platesetters. There are major issues with Quark announcing this.

      As a Graphic Designer and an Art Director I'll believe it when I see the packaging in the stores. Even then I will not be upgrading my Quark until much later because of the horrible condition (from past experiences) the program will be in.

      InDesign is a dream to work in and I do know many Advertising Agencies and Design firms have been switching over to InDesign due to the hardware requirements for Photoshop and Illustrator. (Not to mention more and more printers are supporting the native files and are prefering the PDF files instead). The printing industry doesn't like to upgrade (it is a pain to have to repair everything that just doesn't work quite right). Several industry trade mags have had articles for the past six months on Quark's non-comments about upgrading to OSX. Switching OS's is a bitch.

      Personally, due to the PDF capabilities of Adobe's products and Quark's past inability to create a clean PDF for press -- I'll be switching everything eventually over. I'll still have Quark for legacy files, but I may not have to upgrad

      --
      design is art - art is design
    25. Re:Too late for Quark... by andrewski · · Score: 1

      One word for anyone who has had a hard time submitting a file to a press house:

      Postscript. (or PDF).

    26. Re:Too late for Quark... by Moridineas · · Score: 1

      Sorry, mistyped--I *DO* agree with the overall theme of your message--just not that Adobe has completely killed of Quark. My mistake.

    27. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I piss on the stinking corpse of Quark.
      When I was in publishing, it was the single most arrogant company I ever dealt with. Fuck 'em.

    28. Re:Too late for Quark... by cloudmaster · · Score: 1

      You apperently haven't met the sysadmin at my employer's place (AKA, me). He has a couple of OS X boxes that still run Quark 5.whatever in Classic mode, and a bunch of other System 9.x users that will not let him upgrade their machines because Quark under Classic is a big pain in the butt.

      In other words, we're still running Quark, despite there being no native OS X version. I hate it, and wish that Adobe InDesign would just take over, but those old Mac users aren't real keen on that whole "change" thing...

    29. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I believe I may actually *have* met you.

      Wile I use Quark Express (5 or older - don't remember) the version for "classic" MacOS on my G4 underl MOL (Mac-on-Linux). That way I use "classic" Mac applications running the best modern OS - Linux!!!

      The prerformance was fine. And it worked stable. It never crashed the "main" OS (Linux). And it much less often crashed its shelling OS (MacOS9), in fact just one time - compare it to booting MacOS9 and count how many times you have to reset your Mac per day!

    30. Re:Too late for Quark... by pod · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should look into the other print shops you can be dealing with directly in your native format? I dunno, just a crazy, far out idea... but if someone doesn't want my money, I'll go next door, and make sure they know why and how much business they're losing.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    31. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
      Turns out, they have two jobs available in Denver -- one product management, and one product analyst. However, they have nearly 20 jobs available in Quark India.

      And what conclusions would those be?

    32. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dvi is more common than ps/pdf.

    33. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What drugs are you on....I want some!

    34. Re:Too late for Quark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Duuuuuuuuuuuuuhhhhhhhhhh

      That Quark Xpress is going to be written entirely in India?

    35. Re:Too late for Quark... by JjCale · · Score: 1

      Sure there's lots of people that love Quark, Don't want to change, etc, but I think a lot of them haven't really used InDesign.

      I work in a large Design/Pre-press house and we made a full switch to InDesign from Quark over 12 months ago and haven't loked back.

      I have yet to find a designer who has really USED InDesign go back to Quark, Even all Quark 6's new features are ones InDesign have had for nearly 12 months.

      It's really funny to think that with all the changes and advancements in the design and grahic arts industries that some people allow themselves to become so entrenched and unadaptable.

      It's the nature of the beast. Remember Letraset, Typesetting machines and manual paste ups? It's only been 10 years and now, we've got pdf, direct to plate and digital presses.

      Times change, people's workflows must change too, it's important not to allow existing workflows and setups limit the possibilities

    36. Re:Too late for Quark... by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

      Adobe's inDesign has effectively gobbled up all of the old Quark marketshare, since it has had OSX presence for over a year now...

      Bullshit. inDesign has effectively gobbled up those in the printing world who have gone to an OSX-only production environment... and those are very few and far between in the printing world. It's biggest "gobbling up" of share has been at the expense of pagemaker.

      Make no mistake- all inDesign does is actually make the product a contender, whereas pagemaker wasn't even on the map before. I hate Quark as much as the next guy, but you're just way off on this one.

      Quark is going to have to play *serious* catch-up.

      Notsomuch. They're pretty much feature-for-feature, with Quark often getting the nod for things people really use every day (just slightly) and indesign having a little more razzle dazzle that doesn't get used every day.

      Quark made a *huge* mistake by taking this long to get to OSX.

      Oh, did they? Or did they just decide that their development schedule and Apple's didn't coincide? There might be some revisionist history going on here... before 10.2, printing in OSX had major issues, to the point where Adobe doesn't even go through a lot of Apple's stuff.

      Quark may simply have decided that their core customer base wasn't going to be moving to OSX for at least 2-3 years, especially given the currently massive adversiting industry slump, and that going after the small amount of early adopters just wasn't their game considering their product worked in classic and most of their users would be using classic anyways for various apps.

    37. Re:Too late for Quark... by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

      My school used Quark and kept OS 9 arround just for quark but when it came down to it they really wanted to move to OS X for next fall and they will. When they started planning it there was no word of Quark coming out of OS X so they've already bought Adobe inDesign licenses. Too late for Quark.

      I find it odd that you used Quark at your school to begin with... One of the big reasons why pagemaker even has the market it does is that they've historically given decent discounts to educational institutions, while Quark has just decided it doesn't care about that market.

      IE, almost everything I ever got when I was working on notre dame, or loyola projects was all in pagemaker for the simple reason that volume licenses were a lot cheaper.

    38. Re:Too late for Quark... by kg4eyf · · Score: 1

      I'm with NC State University Student Media. This summer we got rid of quark on all our computers and replaced it with InDesign 2.0. We realy wanted OS X support, and the licensing seemed simpler.

  9. Important... by ciryon · · Score: 5, Informative
    This is really important for Apple. There are extremely many professional Mac users in advertising and graphic production that still use OS9 just because of QuarkXPress.

    Now, they're not only buying OS X.. they need to replace their old G3's with new hardware. Good business for Apple!

    Ciryon

    1. Re:Important... by cruppel · · Score: 1

      And then they'll be behind again in a few months... Built for Mac OS X Jaguar

    2. Re:Important... by jmoo · · Score: 1

      That would be us...we have been waiting for Quark to get off their butts and get their software ported to OSX

      Yes the fun of upgrading 40 Mac's....I'll just slit my wrist now.

      --
      The world isn't run by weapons anymore, or energy, or money. It's run by little ones and zeroes, little bits of data.
    3. Re:Important... by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 1

      And if the 970 rumors are right, if they but wait another 30-180 days (depending on who's rumors you believe), they'll be in the perfect position.

      Coincidence that Quark is out now, rather than a month ago/two months from now? Oh, probably. But you still wonder....

    4. Re:Important... by SuperBanana · · Score: 1

      There are extremely many professional Mac users in advertising and graphic production that still use OS9 just because of QuarkXPress.

      Well, all the smart ones moved to InDesign- and by the way, publishing is much bigger, and unlike the advertising industry, they're not going down the tubes- in fact, publishing is doing very well, a relative who edits textbooks says companies can't hire staff fast enough.

      Besides that- Quark is the posterchild for "what happens when you don't pay attention to your users." Users vote with their feet and wallets, and once they've switched, they're probably never going to switch AGAIN back to you. 4.0 sucked, and Quark didn't adopt OSX. Even before OS X was even in beta, Quark was loosing marketshare to InDesign. OSX just gave InDesign that much more power.

      Now, they're not only buying OS X.. they need to replace their old G3's with new hardware

      That's right- and let's get this straight- you think that people who are still running OS 9 and Quark 3.x are going to, in one fell swoop, upgrade to new a)operating systems b)publishing software c)hardware ??

      Most shops don't have that kind of capital. You're talking many thousands of dollars in equipment+software per workstation. Now add downtime and labor from setup and problems, and a healthy amount of $ for OS and Quark training for staff...I could see per-workstation/employee costs hitting $5-6k easily($2k for the system, $1k for Quark, $1k for setup, lost productivity/lost business...and several $k for training).

    5. Re:Important... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should slit you're wrist, fucking moron. Dont misuse apostrophe's. Fuck'ass.

  10. deja vu by X_Caffeine · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It feels more to me like Novel finally announcing a Windows 95 version of WordPerfect long after Word 6.0 had gobbled up the market.

    The king is dead! Long live King InDesign!

    --
    // I will show you fear in a handful of jellybeans.
    1. Re:deja vu by RedX · · Score: 0, Troll
      It feels more to me like Novel finally announcing a Windows 95 version of WordPerfect long after Word 6.0 had gobbled up the market

      Corel Wordperfect
      Novell Netware
      Two completely separate companies and products.

    2. Re:deja vu by malfunct · · Score: 3, Informative

      Except that in the time period he is talking about, Novel owned wordperfect and later sold it to corel, so he is correct.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    3. Re:deja vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Errr, maybe you mean Corel... Nice anology otherwise o_O They really do let just any post on here dont they?

    4. Re:deja vu by Latent+IT · · Score: 1

      Actually, Novell used to put out WordPerfect, before they sold it to Corel. You can even buy yourself a copy on ebay of good old Novell WordPerfect 6.1.

      I guess everyone's not as old (school) as me. =p

    5. Re:deja vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look up, retard.

    6. Re:deja vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They really do let just any post on here dont they?

      Yes, that's the point of an unmoderated forum where people aren't censored for saying what they believe. Which is lucky for you really, as you are wrong in correcting the guy above, but apart from you being wrong you wrote a shitty post anyway.

    7. Re:deja vu by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      anology?

      dont?

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    8. Re:deja vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No he didn't, and yes they do, which is why you were able to post, you fucking loser.

    9. Re:deja vu by clf8 · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't call it the same. Sure, WordPerfect had a strong share of the market. Sure, they lost it by being late to upgrade. But look at the timing, it was precisely at the time when WordPerfect was languishing that computers really exploded (not literally, trolls).

      Not that I know, but if the publishing industry is as entrenched as people say they are, then there's a lot of Mac's running OS 9. I hope they're better than that 8600 that takes 20 minutes to copy a 20Kb file and can't run Netscape or whatever.

    10. Re:deja vu by Tokerat · · Score: 1


      The 8600 isnt' a bad machine at all. I'm using one right now.

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    11. Re:deja vu by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      No, actually it was their inability to port from DOS to Win 3.x that screwed them. Even when they did, the first Win version was obviously just a veneer over the old DOS core. In particular, the printer support was a disaster. It still had the old WP drivers in and you could bypass the thoughtfully provided Windows print subsystem.

      Lotus 123 was killed off (partly) by not having a timely Win95 version.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
  11. Who cares? by haxor.dk · · Score: 2, Informative

    Quark is a very arrogant company. They are two years late, have abhorrent licensing terms, screw over their customers, and there's usually lots of bugs in their initial releases.

    Plus: InDesign from Adobe has been out for, what? 2 years?

  12. Look out for bugs galore... by artemis67 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's why Quark is still selling QXP 4 alongside QXP 5.

  13. I won't bother to RTFA by GauteL · · Score: 4, Funny

    and I have no clue about Quark Express, so according to good tradition, this is the right story to post my opinion on.

    I just have to say that Quark Express is the worst f***** web browser EVER! And they've taken away all of the good options from the last version. Quite frankly I'm scared that Quark Express will be totally useless as a web browser with version 7.

    1. Re:I won't bother to RTFA by Anonymous+Custard · · Score: 1

      I just have to say that Quark Express is the worst f***** web browser EVER! And they've taken away all of the good options from the last version. Quite frankly I'm scared that Quark Express will be totally useless as a web browser with version 7

      It's also not a very good snow shovel. But it's a great desktop publishing program.

    2. Re:I won't bother to RTFA by ShadowDrake · · Score: 1

      >It's also not a very good snow shovel.

      You know what makes a great snow shovel?

      WordPerfect 6.0 for DOS. The huge box can pick up a surprising amount of snow once you remove the discs and documentation.

      OTOH, I was really disappointed with using FreeBSD to cook my crispy bacon.

      --
      It's just like a fascist dictatorship, without the punctual rail service!
    3. Re:I won't bother to RTFA by commodoresloat · · Score: 1
      OTOH, I was really disappointed with using FreeBSD to cook my crispy bacon.

      Then you're not using it right.

    4. Re:I won't bother to RTFA by falzer · · Score: 1

      Linux cooks bacon better than FreeBSD does. Give that a shot.

  14. Trying it out now by pldms · · Score: 5, Funny

    Works well. I'm running it on GNU/Hurd v1.0. Shame I had to stop playing Duke Nukem Forever to check it out.

    Just popping out in my hover car...

    --
    Slashdot looked deep within my soul and assigned
    me a number based on the order in which I joined
    1. Re:Trying it out now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's hover bike , you moron!

  15. Never thought the day would come by digitalgimpus · · Score: 1

    I thought this was about as likely as having Osama Bin Laden and Saddam Husein singing the American National Anthem in the style of a boy band.

    Goes to show... anything could happen.

    Did anyone see that pig flying past the window?

  16. Re:Very Pricey... by Cruciform · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Photoshop isn't designed with newspaper production in mind. A decade ago, when I interned at a small newspaper, the staff all used antiquated terminals to save their files while Sue imported it all into Quark on the one Mac in the office and did the entire newspaper layout in a matter of a couple of hours.
    Pretty impressive how quickly it allowed the job to be done.

  17. Re:Very Pricey... by cheezus · · Score: 1

    okay, i have photoshop. now which PAGE LAYOUT PROGRAM should I get with my remaining $290.95?

    --
    /bin/fortune | slashdotsig.sh
  18. Important for Apple by conan_albrecht · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is an important release for the Mac because a good portion of the design shops are stuck in Mac OS 9 because of Quark. They absolutely won't move to OS X until Quark is available. Some may have moved to InDesign, but many have not.

    Since Apple is trying its darndest to kill off OS 9, this will bring a lot of people into the new world.

  19. For the Mac? by grub · · Score: 4, Funny


    Anyone else getting a flashback to when Diablo II was in stores?"

    For the Mac? Ohh two weeks ago.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:For the Mac? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, the Mac section actually had to be dusted for once.

  20. Wild speculation by SimJockey · · Score: 1

    This looks like it could be some crafty timing to move some inventory of G4 Powermacs out the door. Lots of folks have said they are waiting on new hardware purchases since the latest G4's don't boot into OS 9, rendering them useless for Quark.

    And once the inventory is moving, in advance of WWDC, who knows what might be announced there...

    Or I could just be talking out of my ass.

    --
    Laugh while you can, monkey boy!
    1. Re:Wild speculation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FWIW, G4s currently have a 2-3 week shiptime in the Apple store Online.

  21. Re:Very Pricey... by cqpalzm · · Score: 1

    And I guess with the $290.95 savings you can spend time looking into the fact that Quark isn't a graphics program!

  22. Ah..cats dacing with dogs... by nick-less · · Score: 1

    and hell just froze over.. ;-) ...and finally Apple can ditch OS9 und announce 64Bit Macs.

  23. Re:Very Pricey... by chrisbw · · Score: 3, Informative

    Well, you could do that, but Photoshop and Quark XPress fill two pretty seperate niches. Page layout has a unique set of requirements as compared to bitmap graphic composition.

    --
    Chris -- http://www.bitter.net/
  24. Hammer's don't work well for auto mechanics by rollthelosindice · · Score: 2, Informative
    they are better for Carptenters.

    Quark is a layout program. Photoshop is a photo/image editing program. Just because they are used by the same people/in the same industry, doesn't mean they do the same things.

  25. Activation by MotownAvi · · Score: 5, Informative

    And of course, since releasing a native version of XPress two years late isn't enough of a show of contempt for their customers, it has product activation to deal with:

    No hardware key is required to activate your license, and you can upgrade your hardware up to five times before you are required to reactivate your QuarkXPress software. QuarkXPress will run for five days before activation is required. After this grace period expires, QuarkXPress goes into reduced functionality mode.

    I can upgrade five times? Thanks, Quark! A grace period? Wow, you're so generous, Quark!

    OS X is now a real OS. It has Quark XPress...

    1. Re:Activation by mpath · · Score: 1

      *laugh* - it may not be as bad as you think, though - reactivation may just mean to resend the product key code, but no further charges.

      --
      I'm not sure what the secret to success is, but the secret to failure lies in trying to please everyone -Bill Cosby
    2. Re:Activation by deadsaijinx* · · Score: 1

      seeing as how mac users never upgrade their hardware anyway......

      --
      YOU SUCK BALLS!
    3. Re:Activation by Michael_Burton · · Score: 2, Funny

      OS X is now a real OS. It has Quark XPress...

      Yes, every real OS has its share of problems.

      --
      When all you have is an axe, everything looks like a grindstone.
    4. Re:Activation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good God, people bitch about MS's activation, but when Quark wants to do the same damn thing, it "might not be as bad as you think"

    5. Re:Activation by bpbond · · Score: 1

      OK, I have to ask: what's so bad about these two things? You want more time to use your illegal copy of QXP before registering it? Do you anticipate changing your hardware configuration more than five times during the life of your machine? (I don't.)

      I don't use Quark, and I'm sure the company and product have lots of problems--that's obvious, from the postings here and elsewhere. But these two antipiracy measures don't seem particularly onerous, for most people, most of the time.

      --
      "Science is a tribute to what we can know although we are fallible" -Jacob Bronowski
    6. Re:Activation by azpenguin · · Score: 1

      I work at a newspaper in the prepress department... we use Quark 4.11 on older G4 towers. Single 400 mhz processors, 448 MB RAM. The newsroom mostly uses old Blueberry iMacs. Haven't changed since they were installed. I don't think the 5 time hardware upgrade is going to bother the core user base. Although, I can guarantee, our IT department is itching to get us to OSX...

    7. Re:Activation by pi+radians · · Score: 1

      I think the actual problem is this:
      I pay the full price for the application. That is basically $900 USD. Now, in order to use certain features in this product that I have already payed for I MUST register the product. This isn't like other companies that decide to send you something free or some cheaper offers if you volunteer your personal information, but they demand it of you in order to use something you've already paid for.

      If I bought a car, and Toyota told me that I must give them all of my personal information in order to use the brake, otherwise it will be a disabled feature in 5 days, I'd be right pissed about that too.

      --

      sin(6cos(r)+5A)
  26. Don't expect widespread adoption now by ikewillis · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Print houses and others in the preprint industry dependent on QuarkXPress for business (and therefore currently on OS 8/9) are unlikely to convert to OS X in the near term.

    This will be a threefold issue:

    • Those wary of change will be unwilling to switch to the new operating system
    • Similarly, there are those who are wary of changing to a new application following a release, because they are scared of bugs which won't be found through regression testing and won't see the light of day until the product sees widespread public use
    • And last but certainly not least, the problem which will hold back those who actually want to change: plugins

    The process of Carbonizing QuarkXPress plugins will certainly be a lengthy one. While certainly some plugin manufacturers will be on the ball and have been working on Carbonizing their plugins for some time using prerelease versions of QuarkXPress 6, there are many others who will be lax to support OS X and consequently have not begun any development effort towards an OS X port and probably won't until a large enough contingent of their userbase is complaining about lack of an OS X version to force them to port.

    So, bottom line, don't expect all the world's print houses to go OS X overnight.

    1. Re:Don't expect widespread adoption now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I recall reading somewhere (don't recall where) that Quark 6 isn't Carbonized-- they used Cocoa (or something). That's why it won't work at all in OS9, and their excuse as to why it took so long.

    2. Re:Don't expect widespread adoption now by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, this gives Quark a couple of point releases to iron out all those bugs _before_ the new 64 bit hardware* gives those OS 9 design shops yet another reason to upgrade.

      *And odly DTP can seriously use that >>4gb of ram - this is one of the few places where 64 bit will be a great thing, not just a marketing trick.

      --
      Beep beep.
    3. Re:Don't expect widespread adoption now by micker · · Score: 1

      Expect it. Its why they adopted Acrobat and why they started to finally switch to Photoshop 6, let alone 7.....

      As soon as a customer shows up with a new quark document and they need 2M 12x18 out on the Heidelberg Di64-4, they will order it and have it shipped over night, just so they can take the job....

      --
      Words are only yours until someone else uses them...
    4. Re:Don't expect widespread adoption now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd just like to say even though my comment is for a story that was posted a while ago and its a couple of levels deep that i hope this will reach anyone supporting OSX graphic workstations.

      Working in tech support for a design company there have been an overload of support requests regarding Illustrator v10 OSX - Just look at the adobe forums - people have come to the point where they are flat out abusing adobe for the amount of bugs in this thing.

      Three patches have been released and whilst they do address some key issues, i could list at least ten more gaping holes in this software.

      heed my comments if you ever fall into the OSX upgrade path and your users need to have illustrator. You can't fully understand what it is like to support totally broken software.

  27. Not exactly by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

    There are probably more people who abandond Macs altogether and went over to Wintel machines so they could run the next version of Quark than Mac users who stayed and switched to Adobe's inDesign.

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    1. Re:Not exactly by TrippTDF · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding me? With Apple's Fanbase? I can't imagine a Mac-head (or Mac company) switching to a PC because of a piece of software!

      I want to see what Quark offers companies like mine that bought Quark 5.0 just a couple of months ago...

    2. Re:Not exactly by LMariachi · · Score: 1

      That would have been pretty fucking stupid since there isn't a Windows version of Quark 6 yet, and the previous version came out for Mac first.

  28. Re:Very Pricey... by V.+Mole · · Score: 4, Funny

    Or save yourself several hundred dollars and pick up a copy of, say, Quickbooks Pro. No, it's not the same function as Quark, but neither is Photoshop, so I didn't think it mattered.

  29. Re:Very Pricey... by rjaredp · · Score: 1

    What? Photoshop and Quark do two entirely different jobs. I can't imagine designing a newspaper, book or magazine in Photoshop, or manipulating an image in Quark.

  30. You really have no idea what Quark is, do you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    It's not a 1337 graphx program. It's a desktop publishing application. One of the best widly used one.

    Saying to get photoshop over it is like saying to get a refrigerator instead of an oven just because they're both used in the kitchen.

    Quark and Photoshop have differnt purposes wholely.

  31. Re:Very Pricey... by tvsjr · · Score: 2, Informative

    You're either a troll or an idiot. Photoshop is an image manipulation package. QuarkXPress, like InDesign, is an advanced publishing and layout package... most people use Photoshop and Illustrator in concert with a layout package, but neither is a replacement for Quark/InDesign.

    Might I suggest you RTFA/RTFWS (website) next time?

  32. Ummmm by A_Non_Moose · · Score: 1

    frome Apple's page:
    QuarkXPress has deservedly gained a reputation for reliable printing, offering consistent and dependable output that prevents costly mistakes.

    You mean like every Quark point-oh release?

    /background voice: this is a point-OH release.

    Ummm, errrr...never mind.

    (is this the release with even more annoying copy protection than WPA? Because they seem to have left it off of Apple's write up...I wonder why?)

    --
    Have you read the moderator guidelines? Well, have you, PUNK? (and I want a Karma: Gnarly option)
  33. Viva la Quark! by May+Kasahara · · Score: 2, Funny
    When I saw this on the Macworld Expo website recently, I thought, "Huh... Quark still exists?"

    Guess it does :)

  34. Re:Err... by jinglecat · · Score: 0

    This is in reference when the producers of Diablo II, from who I don't remember who right now, took their sweet ass time to produce a mac version..

    What is worse is that the company Quark does not care for the mac crowd.. That is why there is a time gap between when OS X was released and now the aformentioned release of Quark.

    What is even worse, QuarkXPress is a really good application, so we Mac users don't have much of a choice... That is until Adobe finishes InDesign which, hopefully, will blow QuarkXPress out of the water.

  35. Pent-up demand by Grayden · · Score: 0

    While it's true that a LOT of people have defected to Adobe InDesign, there are also quite a few shops that still have all of their workflow built around Quark. These shops have been holding back on getting new Mac hardware because a lot of the new stuff can't boot into OS 9. Now we have a native version of Quark in one week, plus the much-rumored announcement in two weeks of PPC 970-based Macs at WWDC, and suddenly we have quite a bit of pent-up hardware demand combined with some compelling new hardware. Looks like a good sales summer for Apple.

  36. Re:In related news, by Xibby · · Score: 1

    "Duke Nukem Forever has been released."

    But the Mac OSX version has been delayed until Quarter 3, just in time for the 2010 Holidy Season.

    --
    I'm going to go back in my box and will think within the limits of my box: MS Sucks Linux Good I read too much Slashdot.
  37. Delayed??? by CombatWombat · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just got off the phone with Quark Education Sales. They are claiming it's been pushed back "around 3 weeks." They weren't clear if this was for Quark 6 in general or just the education lab paks.

  38. does it cut it ? by z80 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That Quark is finally coming out with a OS X Version of Quark is indeed important news. But for me who works at a magazine and sees how important it is that everything just WORKS I would say we are a long way from upgrading to either Quark Express 6 or Indesign 2.

    Just switching versions is far to dangerous and it takes loads and loads of testing and re-testing to make sure the new software makes the cut. I for one think this is too late - the logical upgrade for many of my collegues in the business have been Windows and Indesign. It's a cheaper and better solutions for those who work in a 99% Windows environment already.

    And just for the sake of it - I'm not a Windows troll. I use Mac OS X exclusively at home and both Windows and Mac OS X at work. I love Mac OS X but from an IT Department point of view, Macintoshes are just to darned expensive if you are going to upgrade and buy ten new PowerMacs with ten new versions of QuarkXpress 6.0.

    --
    -- http://z80.org - all opinions, all the time --
    1. Re:does it cut it ? by mrklin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seriously. Apple could have gotten more switchers just by porting CounterStrike from way back then thorugh its 'Switch' ads. Too late.

    2. Re:does it cut it ? by FatherOfONe · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I can't comment on how hard it is to upgrade a graphics application, but I use to do desktop support for both Mac's and PC's and I still help out some with support.

      Your I.T. people are idiots! I was personally responsible for supporting over 700 macs and had little to no problem doing it. Now the Microsoft people will say that they can do that, but I try to remind them that if you have an SMS person, NT/Active Directory Admin person AND a desktop support person, that counts as THREE PEOPLE.
      Don't even get me started on viruses and other security issues. I just spent part of this week fixing that @$%@# bugbear virus. (Didn't touch our GroupWise users or Macs though...) Supporting windows is a pain. The ONLY thing that makes it "easy" is that you know that most companies have drivers and software for it. But guess what... they may not have one for XP, or whatever new Microsoft OS is out. So when you order your "new" machine from Dell you might have to DOWNGRADE the OS just to run your apps. Then you usually find that they don't have an older OS driver for your hardware.

      99% of the world isn't windows.
      Granted I type this from a Win2k box :-)

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    3. Re:does it cut it ? by filmsmith · · Score: 1

      Believe it or not, the switch to InDesign was remarkably easy for everyone here (I work at a major daily newspaper in Phoenix) and would recommend at least testing InDesign for a couple of weeks (Or however long the demo is) on your home computer. Experience the well crafted piece of software it is and then test it out at your job (given you have the time). You'll find that Adobe's long forray in X (don't forget, they were one of the first in it and know it damn well by now) has helped them construct one of the most solid and intuitive layout programs in a long time. I don't own stock in Adobe, but I damn well should. I just speak as a person who started using Quark back in the 3.0 era and believe that the final nail will be driven into their coffin by the end of 2004.

      But back to my point, InDesign makes the cut. Don't just rule something out as too difficult without bothering to find out if it really does "just work."

      And on a parting (and personal) note...your designers will love you so much more if you stick with Macs. Trust!

    4. Re:does it cut it ? by sirshannon · · Score: 1

      if you're in charge of the systems infected with the bugbear, count yourself among the idiots.

    5. Re:does it cut it ? by jchristopher · · Score: 1
      Seriously. Apple could have gotten more switchers just by porting CounterStrike from way back then thorugh its 'Switch' ads. Too late.

      I'm sure you were half joking, but lets do some math. Assume that it takes a team of 5 programmers 6 months to port Counterstrike to OS X. I think that's reasonable... in the past I know that one guy (Westlake Interactive) has singlehandedly done some fine Mac ports in less time than that.

      So those programmers earn $100,000 a year each, or $300,000 for the entire port.

      Lets assume that Apple gives away Counterstrike FREE with every Mac (in reality, they could probably sell many copies to recoup some of their costs).

      Based on their annual report, I believe Apple's margins are around 30%. That means in order to recoup their $300,000 investment, Apple would need to sell $1,000,000 more worth of Mac hardware. If the average Mac costs $1,500 (I'd guess it's probably more), then Apple needs to sell just 666 more Macs as a result of their Counterstrike port to break even. Anything beyond that is gravy.

      Now ask yourself - for many PC users, Counterstrike is the 'killer app' that drives hardware purchases - broadband, video cards, etc. Could Counterstrike help Apple sell a piddling 666 more Macs? Hell yeah!

      mrklin, maybe Apple needs to hire you to do marketing, I think you're on to something here.

    6. Re:does it cut it ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DAMN STRAIGHT! The ONLY reason my PC has the main postion on my desk is those long Counterstrike sessions. If I had CS for my Powerbook, my pcs would be relegated to where they belong. Second place. WHERE THEY BELONG! LONG LIVE STEVE JOBS!

    7. Re:does it cut it ? by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

      Your I.T. people are idiots! I was personally responsible for supporting over 700 macs and had little to no problem doing it. Now the Microsoft people will say that they can do that, but I try to remind them that if you have an SMS person, NT/Active Directory Admin person AND a desktop support person, that counts as THREE PEOPLE.

      I don't think you quite understand the situation. Supporting what you supported and supporting a pre-press ecosystem are just entirely different beasts. IE, the problem isn't keeping the apps running, it's keeping all the different components working and communicating as they're supposed to.

      In other words, app x uses driver xy to print to rip z. Rip z doesn't like the output of driver xy for whatever reason, and things are slightly wrong... so you make app x use driver xz. But app y when printing to rip z has problems using driver xz, and needs to use xy... and your trapping program will ONLY output xy, not xz, so you have to come up with workarounds...

      In short... you do NOT fuck with the pre-press workflow. It's a cardinal rule of anyone who's done it. You get it working, and you don't upgrade stuff willy nilly.

      IE, if supporting macs as client machines is to dragging an icon to install software, supporting macs as clients in a decent sized prepress environment is to building and installing gentoo on your machine.

      Once you have it working, you just don't fuck with it unless you're doing it for fun and not profit.

    8. Re:does it cut it ? by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      You are correct, that I don't understand your industry. However, my experience is that with all systems there comes a time when you have to upgrade. Generally the longer you put that off the longer you keep things working, but at the cost of a MAJOR upgrade later. In your situation, like some medical equipment, it makes sense to wait as long as possible, then test the crap out of the new one. I would imagine that if you went with Windows that you wouldn't even apply the steady stream of service packs, because that could break things.

      That wasn't my point, my point is that it doesn't take more work to support Macs than PC's. In fact, in my experience, if you have a large number of Macs and PC's it takes less effort than if you just have all PC's. I am not saying that if you have two macs and 500 PC's it is easier.

      I have been working in I.T. for around 15 years now, and have found that most I.T. people just don't like any technology that isn't the most common. It use to be IBM, and now it is Intel/Microsoft. They then make up ridiculous statements like "It takes far more effort to support XXX", but at the end of the day, after they "STANDARDIZE" their staff is generally bigger and cost more than before.

      If I ever get a job with a Press company though, I will heed your advice in not to ever fuck with the pre-press workflow... :-)

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    9. Re:does it cut it ? by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      You may be correct, I may be an idiot, but for this instance I have an explanation :-)

      This was a variant of the Bugbear virus. We update our Norton DAT files every night. Our handfull of users that DEMANDED to use Outlook Express have their viewer turned on. Well this virus found a flaw (still unpatched by Microsoft) in I.E. to let this code run. Norton didn't have new DAT files until around noon that day.

      So am I an idiot? Possibly, but not for this reason. The only thing I see I should have done is RIP THAT FUCKING OUTLOOK EXPRESS OFF OF THEIR MACHINES. I could also look at stopping HTML mail, but I have been told NOT to do that. The real issue is that Microsoft doesn't engineer security up front with their products. In a way

      I guess I should thank all the people writing viruses for Windows. Some day it is going to actually do something very bad, and that will just give me the ammunition I need to replace these with Linux, or Macs.

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    10. Re:does it cut it ? by sirshannon · · Score: 1

      what flaw is this? Everything I've found regarding bugbear says that it exploits a known and patched hole in old versions (5.1 and 5.5) of IE.

      (quote from one article: "Microsoft addressed the issue in Service Bulletin MS01-020 and issued a patch for the vulnerability in March of 2001.")

    11. Re:does it cut it ? by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      Ahhh yes... their quote... This appears to be a NEW version of the virus. This hit a brand new WinXP fully updated system (well updated to at least last week). After a Microsofty told me that exact same thing, and that it wouldn't/couldn't effect this type of system, I showed him. He is looking in to it. After we updated Norton it detected it as a type of bugbear.

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    12. Re:does it cut it ? by sirshannon · · Score: 1

      you should also report this to Symantec, they also say that the patch required was released March 29, 2001.

      do you have a copy of the email/script? If so, can you email me a copy?

    13. Re:does it cut it ? by sirshannon · · Score: 1

      also, keep in mind that if the user was able to access the attachment and open it, patches won't help. Getting the user to tell you he/she opened the attachment is near impossible sometimes, though.

      Outlook Express 6 blocks damn near EVERY extention (even emails forwarded as attachments are blocked) but you can get to them by clicking forward, then opening the attachment in the forwarded email before you send it, strangely enough. And when I asked for a copy, I meant a plain-text copy zipped. :)

    14. Re:does it cut it ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't 1999, even most good programmers don't earn $100k/year any more. Indeed, to use an on-topic example, most of QuarkXpress' programmers live in India, where $10-20k/year for a top programmer is considered generous. Please try again.

    15. Re:does it cut it ? by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      Well, after looking through the machine I can't find the script. Norton deleted everyting and the guy has tons of messages.

      It is possible that he opened the attachment, but I believe that the problem is that he has his viewer turned on and the problem is with a flaw in I.E.

      Obviously I can't confirm that he didn't open some attachment, howerver, I will say that out of all of our Groupwise users and Mac users I had ZERO problems.

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
  39. Special Bundle by SuperBanana · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Quark Xpress has been announced for OS X

    Yeah, no shit. It's been "announced" for...uh...years.

    and will be available as of next week

    Yes, and Quark's really looking to make up for all those years of not having a current release- they've bundled Duke Nukem Forever.

    On a more serious note, Quark has other problems. When 4.0 came out, a few people upgraded- and they hated it. Everyone else saw how much they hated it, and refused to upgrade. A few shops bought 4.0 in case someone came to them with a 4.0 file, but for the most part, Quark threw a party and NOBODY showed up.

    Now, the interesting question is, how many people are still using 3.x on OS 9? How many of them are going to feel like upgrading both operating system and publishing software? When I worked as a tech for a publishing company, I found the employees to be COMPLETELY fixated on ONE method of doing any particular task- these people will have mental breakdowns switching...

    1. Re:Special Bundle by Doctor+O · · Score: 4, Insightful
      for the most part, Quark threw a party and NOBODY showed up

      Yeah, and the same happened with XPress 5. We switched to XPress 4 one year ago (because the clients started using it more than once a year), but most people still use 3.32 for the stuff where they can choose. From my perspective, XPress 5 added a new splash screen when starting up, a useless implementation of XML output and Web features that simply don't belong into a PAGE LAYOUT APPLICATION FOR PRINT (dammit).

      I work in what I'd consider a typical prepress company, we have about 40 workstations, mostly G4, the rest G3, all with decent RAM (1-2 GB), all running OS9 with a similar set of the common applications (XPress, Photoshop, Freehand, Illustrator and so on). We definitely don't upgrade to QXP6, and we definitely don't upgrade to OSX. We'd have to get new licenses for about all of our software as working in Classic sucks ass, and it's because a) it's REALLY expensive and b) the people will be unable to work efficiently with OSX for at least one or two months. Remember, these are people who used to work manually without computers, then learned to use a Mac, and who are used to doing things a certain way. They aren't dumb though - actually they are great in improvising stuff in OS9, but OSX would simply break too many of their "shortcuts" to even be considered.

      --
      Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk?
    2. Re:Special Bundle by extrarice · · Score: 4, Insightful

      [quote]
      Now, the interesting question is, how many people are still using 3.x on OS 9?
      [/quote]

      My father is the editor and publisher for four quarterly magazines. He has the latest Apple hardware, and uses OS 9 and Quark 3.32 exclusively. He'll never upgrade, and here's why: "If it aint broke, don't fix it".

      --
      "Jesus saves, but everyone else in a 10 foot radius takes full damage from the fireball."
    3. Re:Special Bundle by OECD · · Score: 1

      Now, the interesting question is, how many people are still using 3.x on OS 9?

      In my (prepress) experience most people upgraded around 4.11, which was two or three updates after 4.0. I'm guessing that we'll see a similar lag before a useable version appears (longer, more likely, since there's a whole new system they have to deal with.)

      Incidently, we have about the same number of customers who use 5 as use 3.32. (Very few.)

      --
      One man's -1 Flamebait is another man's +5 Funny.
    4. Re:Special Bundle by rowanxmas · · Score: 1

      All running OS9 with a similar set of the common applications (XPress, Photoshop, Freehand, Illustrator and so on).

      This is why InDesign is a good choice for you. I know how to use Macs ( thanks Human Genome Project ), and by the time OSX came out I was pure linux. But my GF got a copy of InDesign and since I keep a windows box around *only* for Adobe stuff I was able to sit down and immedialty use InDesign.
      The take home message is that if you already use Photoshop and Illustrator you know how to use InDesign. Adobe has such consistent UI guidlines that you will not be able to realize which program you are in, and be able to seamlessly work with all three.

      From what I saw of the quark screenshots it looks weird and with a poor UI. So use InDesign. Slogan: "Because you use Photoshop and Illustrator anyways."

    5. Re:Special Bundle by switcha · · Score: 1
      On a more serious note, Quark has other problems. When 4.0 came out, a few people upgraded- and they hated it. Everyone else saw how much they hated it, and refused to upgrade. A few shops bought 4.0 in case someone came to them with a 4.0 file, but for the most part, Quark threw a party and NOBODY showed up.

      I didn't see this at all. In our agency, we all moved to 4 and rejoiced in being able to actually control our printing.

      We haven't, however, even bothered with 5 because of all of the useless HTML bloat. If you build clean files, layers aren't really that great, anyways.

      Our entire creative department has been hamstrung to OS 9 until now. I spend 90 percent of my day in Quark, and I know it top to bottom (kinda). The hit I would take, and the ensuing struggle to learn a new app while in the middle of a jam packed schedule prevented us from switching to InDesign.

      Finally, we can rejoin the real world. Huzzahs! I bring my laptop to work just so I can keep some aqua in my life. Bye, bye Happy Mac!

      --
      You know what? ... A little club soda *did* get that out!
    6. Re:Special Bundle by Willard+B.+Trophy · · Score: 1

      I can beat that -- I worked at a publisher that was still using 3.3 on 68K Macs in 2002 ...

    7. Re:Special Bundle by sootman · · Score: 1

      Yup, and it'll remain un-broke until a competitor is able to produce magazines with more recent images and complex layouts in less time thanks to InDesign's ability to work with native, layered Illustrator and photoshop documents.

      I agree, Quark hasn't done much new stuff since 3.32, just as MSIE has stagnated since 4. (According to macworld's review, they didn't even update their type engine for this release, nor did they for any recent releases.) If you're already a Photoshop and/or Illustrator user, use InDesign for an hour and you'll be hooked. A bundle of PS-Ill-ID-Acrobat is only $999.

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    8. Re:Special Bundle by atgeirr · · Score: 1

      Quark 3.3? I still prefer 3.1... They changed some of the shortcuts I was accustomed to between those versions, so I prefer the old one.

    9. Re:Special Bundle by gobbo · · Score: 1

      I am trying to convert to InDesign; I've been using OS X for a year now and avoiding XPress [ibid ibid ibid].

      I'm one of those who refused XPress 4.x migration. I used 3.32 for so many years the key combinations were hard-wired into my fingers, so that I still try them inappropriately in the wrong software before I realize what I'm doing. Likewise I had OS 9 loaded for speed with Keyquencer macros that I haven't replaced in OS X yet, for everything from window zooming to typing out addresses. My fingers want to use them still...

      I have some designer friends working on 'antique' hw/sw and making a good living at it, because of speed. As I will claim ad nauseum, the main computing speed bottleneck is between the ears... your P4 or PPC970 just sits there waiting for you unless it's render time etc. Instinctive control of the interface=$peed, above and beyond many of the new 'features' of software.

      So it's not just a mental breakdown they face: it's a physical/financial quandary they are looking at.

    10. Re:Special Bundle by bmomma · · Score: 1

      how many people are still using 3.x on OS 9?

      Japanese QXP users. Mostly, the Japanese market uses Illustrator for layout, but they use 3.3.1J (I think) if they use QXP at all. QXP 4.x+ doesn't properly support Japanese language fonts. I'm not sure, but I think other asian font sets may fall into this category as well (Chinese and Korean, for example).

    11. Re:Special Bundle by Doctor+O · · Score: 1

      You make a point which I know is valid for a lot of people. (I know a lot of those, and I pointed them to InDesign since I saw and played around with version 2.0 at the 2002 CeBit.)

      The problem however is, that our core business is pre-print, and all of our clients use XPress. We have bought a copy of InDesign when it came out, even updated it to 1.5, but IIRC it got used only once or twice for purposes other than learning how to do stuff in it. I agree it is vastly superior to XPress (now that even the Typography is better than QXP), but that won't help if my clients don't use it. And yes, we've made clear to our clients that we'd prefer InDesign. It's a shame, but it's reality. And lots of inertia.

      --
      Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk?
  40. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually I read an article about some scientists who actually put a computer and keyboard in a monkey cage to see what they would type.

    They spent a considerable amount of time urinating on it and throwing feces at it. (They naturally planned for this behavior by putting a plastic cover over it) then after several days of observation all that was typed was less than 3 pages. Most of which was actually a very repetitive group of letters with lot's of ks,js and ms...

    So if you really put a million monkeys at a million keyboards after pissing on them and throwing some feces on them it they would probably just type the same set of letters over and over again until they died of old age.

    I know you're not actually supposed to take that saying literally...hey maybe they where hard up for some grant money, either that or they just wanted an excuse to play with some monkeys for a couple weeks...

  41. Hell has frozen over. by extrarice · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Quark 6 finally shipping. What's next, Duke Nukem Forever coming out next week?

    --
    "Jesus saves, but everyone else in a 10 foot radius takes full damage from the fireball."
  42. Support for 64 bits? by Jungle+guy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Acording to the increasing rumors, Apple is about to launch computers with a new line of 64 bit processors, the IBM's 970. It will demand a new OS (that wil be Mac OS X Panther), but should be compatible with a modified version of Jaguar. So, when the new 64 bit Macintoshes are released, the public might have have to wait a few more months for a 64 bit version of Quark...

    1. Re:Support for 64 bits? by fordgj · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I seriously doubt that Quark will EVER release a 64-bit version, at least not for a very long time. There just is no point. Does quark do a lot of high precision calculations? Does it need a more memory space than 32-bits provides? I doubt that its needs push a 32-bit system in any way that would make the change necessary. The gains that the rumored system would provide to Quark are related to memory bandwidth and are unlikely to be affected by the change to 64-bits.

    2. Re:Support for 64 bits? by Duncan3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Unlike Windows, where everything breaks ever service pack, or Linux, where stuff has to be ported to every combination of distribution kernel and libc version... I can take my NeXT code from ~1992 and compile it unchanged on OS X 10.2 becasue Apple does things right the first time.

      So I'm 100% sure compiling Quark for a G5 w/10.3 will just be a matter of hitting the build button.

      --
      - Adam L. Beberg - The Cosm Project - http://www.mithral.com/
    3. Re:Support for 64 bits? by n.wegner · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Aren't you saying that NeXT did it right the first time? Apple's Classic and OS 9 Carbon APIs must have been pretty flawed for them to have to drop support like that.

    4. Re:Support for 64 bits? by neuroklinik · · Score: 1

      The IBM 970 runs 32-bit code just fine. Application developers will have the flexibility to update their code when they want, and only if there is a clear benefit.

    5. Re:Support for 64 bits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we only had to wait a "few more months" for the 64-bit version, that would be pretty fucking snappy in the grand scheme of Quark progress!

      It's like comparing the length of this week to the Jurassic period.

    6. Re:Support for 64 bits? by Duncan3 · · Score: 1

      Everyone knows Apple didn't produce computers between the Apple 2 line and the OS X line. They did make some good doorstops while all the brains in the company were over at NeXT, but definately no computers.

      --
      - Adam L. Beberg - The Cosm Project - http://www.mithral.com/
    7. Re:Support for 64 bits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple's Classic and OS 9 Carbon APIs must have been pretty flawed for them to have to drop support like that.

      Where/when did they say Carbon was being dropped?

  43. SOJs by starcraftsicko · · Score: 5, Funny

    No, but I got whiplash when I saw the $899.95 pricetag!

    I'll trade you 5 SOJs for it!

  44. nice recommended system requirements .. by jest3r · · Score: 4, Interesting

    * Minimum: 128MB RAM, Recommended: 1024MB RAM .. My old Quark 4 recommended 12MB "for graphic intensive documents"

    1. Re:nice recommended system requirements .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why's this "interesting"? Quake 1 requires considerably fewer resources than Quake 3. It's normal for software to jump in requirements when you jump a version, let alone two versions.

    2. Re:nice recommended system requirements .. by extrarice · · Score: 1

      [quote]
      My old Quark 4 recommended 12MB "for graphic intensive documents"
      [/quote]
      Quark 3 is overjoyed with 6MB. It was the last, great XPress.

      --
      "Jesus saves, but everyone else in a 10 foot radius takes full damage from the fireball."
    3. Re:nice recommended system requirements .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was 12MB allocated just to XPress; the OS and other apps went on top of that (remember OS9's app specific memory allocation?). The 128 req for OSX is for the entire system.

    4. Re:nice recommended system requirements .. by jest3r · · Score: 1

      most applications don't go from 12MB to 1GB RAM in 2 version shifts .. games excluded.

    5. Re:nice recommended system requirements .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1 GB of Ram is definately a big increase ... but does it really do that much more than Quark 4?

    6. Re:nice recommended system requirements .. by darkgreen · · Score: 1
      Yeah, but the flaw in that is that Quake 3 was actually somewhat different that Quake 1.

      We're getting, what, multiple undos for that extra overhead? whoopee.

      --
      You don't need Geeksintraining if you're on Slashdot.
  45. Re:Very Pricey... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the question on everyone's mind is...

    Was Sue hot?

  46. It's taken 'em two years to get this far by pajamacore · · Score: 1

    Mac users remember all to well the number of applications that broke in the change from 10.1.x to 10.2. Wonder how long it'll take Quark to make QuarkXPress 6 work properly with Mac OS X 10.3, due out in a few months.

    1. Re:It's taken 'em two years to get this far by phillymjs · · Score: 1

      Heh... you say that as if Quark 6.0 will even be usable in 10.2! I know from experience that .0 versions of Quark always suck.

      Still, it's one less reason to have to keep Classic around. Now then, Microsoft, where the fuck is my OS X-native Outlook client???

      ~Philly

  47. Re:Who cares? by thebiggs · · Score: 2, Funny

    Bugs? In Quark? That's crazy talk. Didn't you see? According to Apple, it "runs flawlessly" under OS X.

  48. bad experiences with Quark by elbanevretep · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I once had a job that involved connecting to Quark and Pagemaker using their developer interfaces.
    I don't know if things are better now, but at that time the Quark API was a nasty mess compared to Pagemakers nice clean well-documented API.

    And when I complained about it in a public forum, they had the nerve to send "cease and desist" letters demanding that I take down my comments!

  49. What will the REAL outcome be? by chia_monkey · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So what will really happen with this release? Will we see droves of people buying OS X now because they've been waiting for the OS X version of Quark?

    To be honest, I hope there is no big change in anything. I think Quark acted like a bratty little kid that expected the entire Mac marketplace to wait for them to release the next version. It's pretty inexcusable to use your "we're the standard for top quality publishing software" status to just sit back and work at your leisure. I seriously hope InDesign picked up a bunch of their market share so the people at Quark can be all confused as to why they only sold 100 units.

    But...I just want them to learn a lesson. I don't want them to go out of business for their dumbass decisions. They need to keep pressuring Adobe and Adobe needs to keep pressuring them. I hope this is just a big kick in their ass that makes them put out an even better version next to regain their market share.

    --

    "He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts...for support rather than illumination." - Andrew Lang
  50. I'll Never Buy A Quark Product by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 4, Informative
    Just a few days ago, I installed Quark (on a Windows 2000 machine) that was destined to be on the desk of a desktop publishing person at the company where I work. Photoshop, Adobe Acrobat (full version,) Illustrator and a bunch of others were to be installed as well.

    The Quark software is incredibly anal. The installation forces you to enter piles of personal information, employment information, details about your company, and so on. You can't opt out. And along with the installation CD, it comes with a couple of FLOPPIES! Near the end of the installation it wants the first one and copies some files from it, and then it wants the second one. It writes your registation information onto the second disk and who knows what other information about your computer, products installed, etc. onto it and expects you to mail it to Quark. And then it wants the first disk again and refuses to continue until you let it WRITE to it. Bah, I made a copy of the first disk and let it write to that.

    And then when you start up the program, it incessantly bothers you about wanting to send the registration information over the internet.

    This is the most annoying, invasive installation I have ever come across. I yes, I have installed Microsoft Windows. If I ever have to buy software for myself for desktop publishing, Quark will be at the BOTTOM of the list.

    (Note: I have run across more annoying installations than this, but none of them were as invasive.)

    1. Re:I'll Never Buy A Quark Product by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I previewed the final candidate for Mac OS X a couple of weeks ago, and I'm sad to say that it's not getting any better. It requires you to put in everything imaginable about who you are and where you work. I don't think it asked about your salary, but I don't remember much after I started hammering in bogus info.

      I don't understand in the first place why, because it's software, or because it's an online service, we're expected to fork over so much info about ourselves these days. I have *already paid* for this software -- thousands of dollars per year leave this office for Quark's headquarters in support contracts and licensing fees -- and yet, they can't help basically disabling the stuff we've given money for until we put in at least *something*. It's so aggravating. It's like they just want the door to hit you in the ass on the way out of their shop.

      In the meantime, InDesign is quite nice. I'm taking this opportunity to broaden my skill base.

    2. Re:I'll Never Buy A Quark Product by fr0dicus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Rest assured the Mac version won't come with floppies ;)

    3. Re:I'll Never Buy A Quark Product by fobbman · · Score: 2, Funny

      Clearly they have put the XP in QuarkXPress.

    4. Re:I'll Never Buy A Quark Product by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quark has always been like this. Quark 3.1 was one of the first mac programs i remembered that scanned the network to make sure two versions with the same license weren't running on different machines. Back at the time of Quark 3.3 ~1994, it left Pagemaker in the dust. I got out of graphic design in 1997, but I've heard Adobe's caught up and surpassed quark-- especially in the integration with Photoshop.

    5. Re:I'll Never Buy A Quark Product by Diamondback · · Score: 1

      I work for University Housing's tech people, at my university, and just installed the latest Quark on someone's machine.

      It had one CD. Maybe the education version's different? The registration stuff was annoying, though.

    6. Re:I'll Never Buy A Quark Product by random_static · · Score: 1

      the Quark version that's keeping my local community college from going all-out OSX on their macs still requires a copy protection dongle. in fact, the ITS department even had the damnedest time getting USB dongles out of Quark so they could at least go to flat-panel iMacs. there was plenty of cursing all around last fall as the semester was about to start and the student newspaper was worrying how they were gonna go to press...

    7. Re:I'll Never Buy A Quark Product by dotgain · · Score: 1

      No, but by the sounds of things, a writable CD instead. They'll probably dust it for your fingerprints if you ever mail it in, too

  51. quick movers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm suprised if there is anyone left who hasn't moved on to other apps.. quark, you suck.

    you're 2 years too late..

  52. Imagine... by rigmort · · Score: 1

    ...a Beowulf cluster of Quarks...

  53. Support will be a nightmare by Dr.Evil · · Score: 5, Informative

    Caution: bitterness alert!

    Go ahead and mark me a troll, but I do know whereof I speak when it comes to Quark attitudes and culture, having worked there for a year until my whole project was laid off to celebrate getting a release out the door.

    If Quark keeps to its m.o., the team in the U.S. who actually built XPress 6 will now be pink-slipped and the product responsibility transferred to Chandragar, India. No knock against Indian developers in general, but Quark has not adopted a "best programmer rupees can buy" mentality there, and the continued maintenance will probably be a nightmare. Quark India is very Windows-centric, and even at that their programmers are writing C++ and Java like it's Visual Basic.

    N.B. by Quark's own versioning rules, this should be XPress 5.5, and they should be charging the minor upgrade price to XPress 5 users. Mac users who bought XPress 5 are getting screwed royally. I'm sure in Fred Ebrahimi's (the owner of Quark) mind, it's justified since the porting effort was so extensive, but the only notable feature is Carbonization. There was a post above that noted Ebrahimi's assertions that the Mac is a "dying platform." Quark didn't even commit to Carbonizing XPress until Mac OS X (and InDesign 2.0) shipped, and Ebrahimi realized the publishing market would dump XPress before they'd dump the Mac. When I was laid off, every program the company had in R&D was Windows-only by design. Talk about a company that doesn't know what side its bread is buttered on - Quark deserves to be reduced to irrelevance just for sheer lack of vision. Go Adobe!

    --
    Right...
    1. Re:Support will be a nightmare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      No knock against Indian developers in general, but Quark has not adopted a "best programmer rupees can buy" mentality there

      That's the understatement of the century - there are certainly perfectly good Mac developers in India (as there are pretty much anywhere), but I doubt they're working for Quark.

      A large number of professional Mac developers subscribe to Apple's carbon-dev mailing list. Quark's Indian developers post there regularly, and although they're not quite at the "so, which button do I press to compile?" level they're not far off it.

      Some of the questions they've asked show a basic lack of knowledge of Mac programming, or programming in general to be frank (e.g., refusing to do even basic research to understand sample code/docs, and insisting the list help them out instead).

      Posting anonymously since I've no desire to start more noise than there is already on that list. But from the outside, it looks like a textbook example of "let's outsource development to the cheapest bidder". :-(

    2. Re:Support will be a nightmare by falafelJones · · Score: 1

      just checked the quark site, upgrade pricing is $199-499 depending on the version you've got, so one would presume 5.x users (myself included) can get it for $199.

      --
      -O
    3. Re:Support will be a nightmare by fire5ign · · Score: 2, Informative

      ...I do know whereof I speak when it comes to Quark attitudes and culture...

      Going back even further, who remembers in the mid 90's, when Quark bought Mtropolis, the software that was supposed to give Macromedia a run for its money? When they bought it, they said they were going to incorporate it into new versions of XPress... and that was the end of that. I'll never forgive them for killing Mtropolis.

      btw, I use InDesign.

    4. Re:Support will be a nightmare by Dr.Evil · · Score: 1

      just checked the quark site, upgrade pricing is $199-499 depending on the version you've got, so one would presume 5.x users (myself included) can get it for $199.

      Still, isn't it a little aggaravating to pay $200 for the same program you bought a year ago, just so you can run it on an operating system that's been out and stable for almost 2 years? They'd never get away with charging $200 for an upgrade whose sole discriminating factor is that it works on Windows XP when it used to only work on Windows 95 (especially if Windows XP had already been out two years)!

      --
      Right...
    5. Re:Support will be a nightmare by falafelJones · · Score: 1

      while i do agree (& have dealt with quark sillyness in the past), i was just correcting the parent post. personally it would have annoyed, but not suprised me if i had to shell out the $900 for 6. i don't date my girlfriend cause i like her parents, & i don't use quark because i like the company. i need it to work, and either way i'd have to buy it. so relatively speaking, i'm okay with the price & overjoyed to be ditching OS9 sometime in the near future.

      --
      -O
    6. Re:Support will be a nightmare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Is this the same Quark that was going to buy Adobe?

      http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,14656,00 .html

      The real innovator at Quark was Tim Gill who created the original QuarkXPress, actually cared about his employees, and gives generously to AIDS charities.

      Finally he got tired of Fred Ebrahimi's idiocy and cashed out. "Quark India" is the brainchild of Fred Ebrahimi, who is one cheap bastard.

    7. Re:Support will be a nightmare by trudyscousin · · Score: 1
      "Quark India is very Windows-centric..."

      I got that impression from the carbon-dev mailing list that Apple runs. There's this Quark India guy who often appears there, asking for help with the most elementary Mac OS development issues. This leaves me feeling none too sanguine about the future of the Macintosh product.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, write technology blogs.
    8. Re:Support will be a nightmare by big_a · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I remember that... They killed mTropolis because they feared it would compete with QuarkImmedia.

      If I remember right (which I probably don't) QuarkImmedia basically let you put hyperlinks in quark documents and publish to the web (and required a browser plug-in to view...) This was all, "back-in-the-day".

      Buying mFactory was a really strange move for Quark. mTropolis wasn't even in the same market as their Immedia vaporware.

      It's too bad because mTropolis could have competed very well with Macromedia if it had a little more time to mature.

    9. Re:Support will be a nightmare by Pope · · Score: 1
      It's too bad because mTropolis could have competed very well with Macromedia if it had a little more time to mature.

      I had an early demo of mTropolis back in the days of when I developed CD-ROM apps in Director. The problem I saw with mT was that they were essentially competing with Director for their audience, but pricing themselves against Authorware (in other words, AW and mT were in the $5000 bracket, Director was in the $700 bracket), and the cost to switch over and learn a brand new environment wasn't really worth it.

      The "object-oriented" approach to developing was a lot like HyperCard, but with drap-n-drop messaging between objects. I got to make one app with mTropolis, a port of a Director project I made that was originally a port of a HyperCard stack I made in school. I think mT could have been a decent competitor to Director, but only if the price had been similar.

      Also, like XPress users, most of the Director developers I knew were really stuck in their ways and knew the program inside-out. Once Director 5 came along, everything broke!

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
  54. Re:mac problem by General+Sherman · · Score: 1

    It's funny because this is a really, really old troll. Who types responses to slashdot in BBEdit? Are you stupid? Just stop. seriously. If you had an actual complaint you wouldn't post as an anonomous coward.

    --
    - Sherman
  55. The Diablo reference reminded me... by wramsdel · · Score: 1

    Red Vs. Blue did a parody of the Apple "Switch" ads, except with a gamer. Good stuff.
    http://www.redvsblue.com/appleswitch.shtml

  56. Irony by babbage · · Score: 5, Funny

    Clearly, putting the word "express" in the name of the product reveals a sense of humor previously unsuspected at Quark... :-)

    1. Re:Irony by eclectic4 · · Score: 1

      Good thing for Quark the name is actually XPress, which I think is even FUNNIER.

      X Press? hmmm...

      --

      "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
    2. Re:Irony by megabulk3000 · · Score: 1

      apparently, you're alone in your opinion. Sorry.

    3. Re:Irony by eclectic4 · · Score: 1

      I have absolutely no problem wit dat.

      Heh...

      --

      "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
  57. FUCK OFF U TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this guy is a troll he posts every time theres an apple story on the front page

  58. Proton Special by summernot · · Score: 1

    If you buy two copies you get the next one 1/3 off! Woo hoo!

  59. Not entirely by EvilStein · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I bought Diablo II the day it was available for the PC - the CDs were hybrid Mac/Windows CDs.

    The *game* was available - seems that Blizzard held back in the *installer* for ages.
    That pissed me (and a lot of others) off.

    1. Re:Not entirely by greenskyx · · Score: 1

      I guess I must have been thinking about Diablo I then??? It's been a while... thanks for the correction... :+)

    2. Re:Not entirely by EvilStein · · Score: 1

      I'm having trouble even remembering Diablo I! ;)

  60. Re:Very Pricey... by Artemis+P.+Fonswick · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    You, sir, are a gentleman and a scholar.

    --


    Kudos to you, my good man.
  61. Re:mac problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My quadra 650 has slowed to a crawl. Figured it was a Mobo problem bc for years now the scsi port hasn't worked, I've had numerous hard drives die in it (maybe it wasnt the drives, after all). Maybe it is something simple, but I'm replacing the board with a 7100AV board. It used to be fast, now it is like an SE/30 Puzzled me. not that that helps you, but I thought I'd chime in

  62. Page layout is more taxing than you think by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Does quark do a lot of high precision calculations?

    Being a professional layout application, I would think it does! Basically a layout app is doing rendering of fonts and graphics to a page in very precise ways - it's why you'd use Quark or InDesign instead of Word.

    Also, it needs to work with very large media and high color depths.

    All sorts of things in the page layout space can take advantage of 64 bit processor features.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Page layout is more taxing than you think by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      Being a professional layout application, I would think it does! Basically a layout app is doing rendering of fonts and graphics to a page in very precise ways - it's why you'd use Quark or InDesign instead of Word.

      Quark never has to be more precise than its actual output device. That is, the "precision" you're talking about here is on the order of thousandths of an inch, well within the abilities of 32-bit CPUs (which can have 48-bit or better FPUs). The "high precision" that the original post was talking about is on the order of astronomical distances measured in meters.

      Also, it needs to work with very large media and high color depths.

      At 1,000 dpi, 32 bits can address about 4 million inches. The color depth you need to process is limited by your input and output devices (camera or scanner color resolution). None of these are things for a 32-bit CPU to lose sleep over.

      This is not to say Quark can't benefit from 64-bit optimizations, especially if it takes on some image processing duties. As it is today, however, it's unlikely to be dramatically improved on 64-bit CPUs.

    2. Re:Page layout is more taxing than you think by chessnotation · · Score: 1

      The Quartz imaging model in OS X is based entirely on 32 bit floating point values in much the same way that QuickDraw was based on 16 bit integer values. However, a 32 bit float has only 24 bits of precision with eight bits used for scaling. Even then, Quartz supports an increase in linear resolution by a factor of 256 over QuickDraw. In real world terms, an output device with, say, 2,400 DPI resolution was limited to about 13.65 inches (QuickDraw, signed extent) in OS 9 now can be as long as 291 feet using Quartz. That's enough to print advertising posters for the sides of a thirty story building.

      So, there's little need for a 64 bit imaging model.

      Additionally, moving from a 32 bit to a 64 bit PPC architecture changes little outside of allowing larger native pointer and integer representations; this has no effect on the already supported operations on 32 and 64 bit floating paint values.

  63. Very simply untrue... by eclectic4 · · Score: 1

    Quark still makes up the vast majority of DP's choice of page layout app. The figures, although kept very quiet by Adobe AND Quark show anywhere between 70-90% Quark dominance.

    Quark made a huge mistake, but they had the market share to withstand it.

    I work in this industry, with many printers and designers and can tell you that VERY few have switched, at least from my seat...

    --

    "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
  64. Re:Who cares? by tenton · · Score: 1

    Yeah, flawlessly, with all of the new "features". ^_^

  65. That study's flawed: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    they didn't teach the monkeys to touch-type.

    (hmmmm.... I smell a grant proposal...)

    Anyhow, they didn't let the study even get started. The adage is "an infinite number of monkeys given an infinite amount of time". That's what you get when you have liberal arts majors trying to design experiments.

  66. Not so fast.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I just got off the phone with Quark Customer Service and they said that information is incorrect. Quark is holding off on the release for more testing over the next couple weeks and a decision will be made soon on when to release it. If you don't believe me, call 1-800-676-4575 and ask for Patti. Then again this is Quark and their BS smells as bad as what come out of Washington D.C. and Redmond.

    1. Re:Not so fast.... by kupo+zero · · Score: 1

      Now I definitely AM smelling a Diablo II.

    2. Re:Not so fast.... by mgs1000 · · Score: 4, Funny

      What did you eat for lunch?

    3. Re:Not so fast.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not so fast is right: check out the following, from a pal on the ex-quarkians list...

      --Forwarded Message:
      To: XQ
      Subject: [xq-list] yet again
      Date: Tue, 17 Jun 2003 11:01:45 -0600

      Quark just gave all of U.S. QA 6 weeks notice. Rumor is they're going to do the same to R&D in the U.S either today or tomorrow. They haven't even shipped 6.0 yet; brass ones the size of the moon I'm telling 'ya. I'm sure everyone's going to work really hard to get 6.0 out now.

  67. More like the "I'll Believe It When I See It" dept by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll believe this is actually shipping when I have a box in my hands.

    Also, this is really nothing to rejoice about. Historically, Quark n.0 versions suck-- it takes them a while to squash the really nasty bugs. When 6.1 comes out, then I'll feel better.

  68. Hey, Mr 9600 guy! by danigiri · · Score: 2, Funny

    WOW, now you'd better get a new 64MB SIMM to upgrade your good 'ol Mac!!! Otherwise you will not be able to run the latest version of Quark. You bought the previous version and the PM at the same time, right?

    Brace yourself for the speed bump in copying files. After the surrealistic experience, shut up.

  69. Let me introduce you to a new word: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    too. I guess you're not a journalist or editor or proof reader or whatever at that magazine.

    1. Re:Let me introduce you to a new word: by z80 · · Score: 1

      English is not my native language, troll.

      --
      -- http://z80.org - all opinions, all the time --
    2. Re:Let me introduce you to a new word: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's no excuse, EuroFag.

  70. Quark 6 or The Final Nail in InDesign's coffin by Shadowmist · · Score: 5, Informative

    I work at a major pre-press service bureau in Manhattan. We bought InDesign to support any of our customers who switched over or decided to try it out. We used to be 90 percent Quark and 15 percent Pagemaker in regards as files sent to us by clients counting both Mac 90% and Windows users (10)

    Now the work is 99+% Macintosh and virtually all Quark with Pagemaker practically extinct. Since we bought our first Indesign license we've had less then 10 documents total sent to us.

    InDesign may be doing well at your school but in the real world here in Manhattan it's been virtually a total no-show. And it's no surprise, aside from the fact it's even slower due to being nothing but plug-ins and container and really bites in the print department, InDesign is little more than a bad reincarnation of PageMaker.

    1. Re:Quark 6 or The Final Nail in InDesign's coffin by Theatetus · · Score: 3, Funny
      We used to be 90 percent Quark and 15 percent Pagemaker

      Wow... that must have been a big company.

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    2. Re:Quark 6 or The Final Nail in InDesign's coffin by LMariachi · · Score: 3, Funny

      Most InDesign users wouldn't be sending out InDesign format documents to prepress, they'd be sending PDFs.

    3. Re:Quark 6 or The Final Nail in InDesign's coffin by raju1kabir · · Score: 1
      Most InDesign users wouldn't be sending out InDesign format documents to prepress, they'd be sending PDFs.

      Must limit their options... I have a hard time finding shops that will accept PDFs.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    4. Re:Quark 6 or The Final Nail in InDesign's coffin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My company prints 14 books (magazines) a week... to 5 different printers... all get sent as PDFs... Never had a problem printing from PDFs... won't use any printer that won't accept them.

      The only places that don't accept them are small, ancient shops, in my experience.

    5. Re:Quark 6 or The Final Nail in InDesign's coffin by gandhii · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Most InDesign users wouldn't be sending out InDesign format documents to prepress, they'd be sending PDFs.

      Must limit their options... I have a hard time finding shops that will accept PDFs.



      I must disagree. I can't argue with your own personal experience, but your statement is totally counter to my own experience. I work for a print house in RTP, NC and adobe acrobat is seriously embedded in everything we do. Of course we use macs and quark.. graphic designers tend to have no ability to learn anything new and thats basically all there is to say to that. But I was talking about acrobat. Practically everything in the industry handles pdf as well as postscript. Even the xerox docutech and docucolor printers we have have acrobat imbedded in them. And the docutech is controlled by a sun running solaris. .. Now on to other places. I haven't seen any company involved in printing that does not handle pdfs. even tiny copy service companies like kinkos require pdfs. The only limitation I've found is in the version of acrobat that they support. The last time I came across a print related company that did not handle pdf's was some time in the 90's like 1997 or perhaps earlier.

    6. Re:Quark 6 or The Final Nail in InDesign's coffin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We used to be 90 percent Quark and 15 percent Pagemaker in regards as files sent to us...

      Really...

      Since we bought our first Indesign license we've had less then 10 documents total sent to us.

      Doesn't sound like that was a very good switch for your business.

    7. Re:Quark 6 or The Final Nail in InDesign's coffin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, I think the poster was replying to this post, which said,

      "My school used Quark and ... they've already bought Adobe inDesign licenses. Too late for Quark."

      So everything's OK. No one's presuming to know your age.

    8. Re:Quark 6 or The Final Nail in InDesign's coffin by Shadowmist · · Score: 1

      It wasn't a switch, we're not mainly creators but outputters and it wasn't that we abandoned Quark we bought InDesign to support InDesign documents by our customers in particular one customer who was going to switch to InDesign for all in-house work and was getting a lot of help from Adobe to do it. However apparantly the product wasn't up to the industrial workload expected from it as the project never got anywhere and the customer instead laid off the majority of their creative workforce.

      We still have InDesign, we've had it from 1.0 to the present 2.0.2 versions and we'll keep them updated. But anyone who is used to the level of fine level of editing control that Quark offers could not possibly be happy with InDesign. For that matter Quark running under Classic has worked better for me than InDesign under OS X, but some blame for that does fall to OS X Print Center but that's another thread entirely.

  71. Re:Very Pricey... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yes...and did you do 'er?

  72. Re:Err... by neuroklinik · · Score: 3, Informative

    Uhm... InDesign has been available for quite some time now. InDesign 2 is a great product, and offers several features that Quark does not, particularly centering around integration with other Adobe apps, such as Photoshop and Illustrator.

    As far as a time lag between Mac OS X release and Quark 6 release, I think that has more to do with the fact that 6 appears to be a complete re-write, and not just a carbonized version of Quark 5. Quark 6 will not run on any Mac OS prior to Jaguar.

  73. The death of the ADB mouse by Mrs.+Grundy · · Score: 1

    I'm sure a lot of people have already switched over to InDesign, but as someone who has used Quark for years it is a difficult and annoying switch, but Quark left little choice for people. Quark 4 and 5 were buggy in classic and it was difficult to deal with fonts when using classic and OS X together. On the other hand, there are also a lot of people who are still hanging on to their G3s waiting until a native Quark is available before upgrading to OS X and buying a new G4 (or G5). These people are desperate for new computers with full harddrives, not enough memory, and worse, they can't use Safari. Also, when their mouse dies, it is difficult ot find an ADB mouse that works on a G3, so they end up buying a USB mouse and some dorky converter. The release of Quark 6 will finally allow them to upgrade. This must be a large group of people and hopefully it will translate into a good surge of sales for apple.

    1. Re:The death of the ADB mouse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse me...What the fuck are you talking about?

      ADB?? Mouse???? What the BLUE FUCK does that have to do with Quark?

  74. It won't cut it for a while by OECD · · Score: 1

    I'm going to go out on a limb and say, right now, that QX 6.0 won't cut it. In fact, if we can go by Quark's history, QX 6.1 won't quite cut it either (think 3.0, 3.1, 4.0, 4.1).

    Oh, I'm sure it'll be good enough for some people who stay within a feature subset but there'll be gaping holes in things like Applescript support, and they won't even be addressed for another couple releases.

    Let's just say that I'm not expecting to boot my work machine in OSX until next year.

    --
    One man's -1 Flamebait is another man's +5 Funny.
    1. Re:It won't cut it for a while by neuroklinik · · Score: 1

      Actually, the Quark 6 AppleScript dictionary is pretty extensive. No gaps here. Quark has always had great AppleScript support... it just hasn't been very well documented.

  75. science fiction is becoming reality by SethJohnson · · Score: 2, Funny


    Whew. We crossed the millenium and I was worried when I didn't see flying cars and silver clothes in the stores. Were the movies of the 1930's over-anticipating the future?

    Now that Quark Xpress 6.0 is announced for Mac OS X, I'm regaining my faith that I'll have a robot that can make beer in unlimited quantities.
  76. Wait! by John+Harrison · · Score: 4, Informative
    Finally. I work at a newspaper and the fact that there was no QuarkExpress support for OSX has kept us from updating our macintoshes. We can finally get back up-to-date.

    Hold off on purchasing new hardware for a few weeks to see if the 970 rumours are true. How dumb would it be to hold off this long only to purchase new hardware at the worst possible time?

    1. Re:Wait! by Shuh · · Score: 1
      Hold off on purchasing new hardware for a few weeks to see if the 970 rumours are true. How dumb would it be to hold off this long only to purchase new hardware at the worst possible time?
      He might just be talking about updating to OSX, not to new Macs.
    2. Re:Wait! by MouseR · · Score: 1

      Because at this point, ANY Mac hardware running capable of running Mac OS X would do to run XPress in a protected-memory environment, and real paged memory management.

      XPress demmands huge resources for your average magazine layout.

    3. Re:Wait! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple always has some new groundbreaking hardware in the works. You'll never be cutting edge with a Mac. Maybe for a couple of weeks, enough time to sell a bunch of shiny new boxes. Then rumors start, new products get announced, and you'be way behind the curve before you even got the shrink wrap off. This always bothered me about Macs... nice hardware, polished, nice OS, interesting community, but this almost farcical planned obsolescence is quite silly and strange to comprehend.

    4. Re:Wait! by Clock+Nova · · Score: 1

      Planned obsolesence? What are you talking about? Since when does upgrading a product line make every other product obsolete? My Mac does not have the fastest processor, but it won't be obsolete for years to come. Going from 68k to PPC made older Macs obsolete. Introducing OSX made machines that would not run almost obsolete. Inroducing faster processors just makes some machines seem a bit slower.

      Stop obsessing about being on the cutting edge! I've always considered it a boon that the Mac product line is updated so quickly. If the current lineup does not meet your needs, wait six months and try again.

      --
      There they were, sitting in the van with all those dials, and the cat was dead. -V. Marchetti, CIA
  77. InDesign and PageWaster by yroJJory · · Score: 1

    Well, Adobe abandoned hope of any PROs using PageWaster, since it still hasn't changed much since version 4.2.

    Rumor has it that Adobe already finished InDesign 3.0 and has been waiting for Quark 6 to ship before unleashing it.

    --
    Jory
    1. Re:InDesign and PageWaster by darkgreen · · Score: 1
      Rumour has it slightly askew.

      InDesign 3 and InCopy 3 are in beta at the moment - still a few things to work out.

      --
      You don't need Geeksintraining if you're on Slashdot.
  78. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And yet their product is probably the only real reason to use a Mac in a professional envirment (Quark still the biggest name in the publishing industry). Just goes to show you how stubborn people who actually have work to do are despite evangelist spiels from Steve Jobs.

  79. Re:Very Pricey... by neuroklinik · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... Considering that the two applications are designed for radically different purposes, you won't get much page layout work done in Photoshop.

  80. Symantec all over again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Way back in '94, when the first PowerMac's shipped, there were essentially 2 ways to make Mac software: Apple's MPW and Symantec's Think C. MPW was designed for/by unix heads and is horrendously unpleasant to learn, slow and awkward but not too bad to use; Symantec was the forerunner of modern IDE development software. They pretty much owned the market.

    When the PowerMac appeared, neither was really capable of making PowerPC native applications. There were (crude, difficult) workarounds, or you could buy an IBM RS6000 and develop on that (if you were very rich and very patient: the learning curve & workaround list was worse than MPW.)

    Enter Metrowerks, a then little known company who provided the first practical development tools, with zero support from Apple who favored Symantec. Today they own the market (MPW is dead; Apple's free tools are kind of usable, for shareware-level projects.) Symantec waited a year or so before releasing their own PowerPC tools: they made a big announcement and confidently expected us all to rush to them. What happened? Heard of Symantec development tools on Mac lately?

    The moral of this story is left as an exercise....

    1. Re:Symantec all over again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite the whole story. Symantec and Apple were co-developing next generation dev tools, and the effort failed so badly that the lawyers were sent in. If it wasn't for Metroworks, the PowerMac would have been a huge flop for the lack of software.

      Moral of the story is that it's bad when #1 gets in bed with #2.

    2. Re:Symantec all over again by TheDredd · · Score: 1

      MPW was updated to the end, just check the releases, it included all the latest carbon libs and all, full PPC support and it was used for real projects ala Marathon from bungie. Apple's free tools are kind of usable, for shareware-level projects. I never knew Maya was a shareware level product, because that one is written with apples free tools

    3. Re:Symantec all over again by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

      Enter Metrowerks, a then little known company who provided the first practical development tools, with zero support from Apple who favored Symantec. Today they own the market (MPW is dead; Apple's free tools are kind of usable, for shareware-level projects.) Symantec waited a year or so before releasing their own PowerPC tools: they made a big announcement and confidently expected us all to rush to them. What happened? Heard of Symantec development tools on Mac lately?

      Whatever happened to MrC? Apple and Symantec started a joint venture for some next-gen PPC compiler, that supposedly had wicked speed but never really saw the light of day. I remember reading it just kicked the tar out of everything (including metroworks) in terms of speed... and I know Apple hired some of the original team, but have never heard what happened to the original project or where the code went.

      While i'll admit that Metroworks absolutely saved Apple's ass in the 68k-PPC conversion, I don't think you can apply the same analogy to indesign... ...for the simple reason that most of the print world works on a much different upgrade schedule than the rest of us (especially apple's core market now- consumers). IE, go to any decent sized print shop or even the recent printing conventions over the last 2 years and 99% will say something to the effect of:

      "Oh yeah I like OSX. It has a lot of promise. I use it at home. But we still use OS9 at work and probably will for another few years..."

      So they weren't DYING for an OSX Quark, as none of their workflows were ready for it anyways. If anything, most of the negative sides of this to Quark have simply been losing some potential upgrades to v5... as most didn't want to upgrade wholesale if they'd just have to do it anyways when they did decide to go to OSX.

    4. Re:Symantec all over again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe dead is a bit strong for good ol' MPW. Comatose, maybe? Senile has a nice ring as well.

      Maya was ported from a unix version that was undoubtedly built w/ the GCC toolchain. Apple's tools were a natural fit, and they could afford a little extra time. (They'd get a smaller, faster executable w/ CodeWarrior, but they'd have to deal with more source differences.)

      Apple's tools are the best way to access the (awful) API documentation, and they're actually pretty good w/ Cocoa (better integration, just like VC++ is better for MFC projects on Windows.) But Cocoa is and will remain (unless Apple eases up on their OS X-only scorched Earth policy) an extreme niche player and largely irrelevant. Being the best framework is meaningless if there's no market for products (just try to convince your PHB otherwise.)

  81. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do "evangelist spiels from Steve Jobs" have to do with Quark?

  82. Re:Err... by nycroft · · Score: 4, Informative

    That is until Adobe finishes InDesign which, hopefully, will blow QuarkXPress out of the water.

    It's done, bro. Version 2.0.2. Try using it. Unfortunately, many designers are just plain stuck with Quark because they refuse to try anything else. I used Quark for years. Then OS X came out and then InDesign 2.0. Quark was lagging, so I gave InDesign a try. I think it works great! It even has some familiar Quark-style features (like the infamous boxes to place images and text in). The Photshop/Illustrator-style pallets are a breeze, and the proxy for alignment makes the ol' create-a-second-empty-box-to-align-by-center trick in Quark totally archaic.

    I am not only a designer, but I am also a pre-press technician, and InDesign writes pretty clean Postscript and integrates well into a Heidelberg Delta/Fuji Topsetter workflow. Give it a shot. Although now that Q6 is out, I gotta go pick up a copy, just to check it out.

    --
    Mr. Bond, they have a saying in Chicago: Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time is enemy action.
  83. Re:Who cares? by Super+Grover · · Score: 1

    > According to Apple, it "runs flawlessly" under OS X
    Yeah, as long as you don't do anything with it. That includes printing.

    --
    Salsa Shark. We're gonna need a bigger boat.
  84. hello, Quark? 2001 called... by jub · · Score: 3, Funny

    and they want their press release back.

  85. Here's an Early Prediction about Quark/OS X. by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 4, Interesting
    There will be a problem.

    And I don't mean a tiny little bug; I predict a veritable cornucopia of showstopping bugs that will send prepress people reeling.

    Quark, as a company, have been sitting on their collective asses for a very long time. The cash cow that Quark has become made them complacent. I remember a running joke amongst my print industry friends, being that a new version of Quark was basically a rotation of the splash screen.

    And don't even make me bring up Metropolis, which joins others of its ilk in the historical dustbin of software that was so fucking great, the chatter around it literally transmogrified into pure greed and killed it in the end. Quark did that. (okay, so I did bring it up.)

    So, I was thinking, now that the long delay is over, what happens if there's some kind of massive bug in Quark 6? People have been waiting so long for this thing that it had better be totally bulletproof... which of course it won't.

    Quark has a history of shoddy work, draconion copy-protection methods (still shipped floppies to Mac users well after Apple stopped shipping floopy-capable Macs... everyone I know uses the Disc Copy trick and knows it by heart for installing Quark), and all sorts of stupid web-based initiatives in their print product.

    No, I think there will be bugs, and Quark won't fix them (certainly not right away). I can see it already with Acrobat incompatibilities - and Adobe has a vested interest in screwing Quark now. Acrobat combined with Quark was the killer combo a couple of years ago, let's see how they play with InDesign in the water. Add in OS X and its just bound to happen... maybe I'm off-base saying such a thing, but I bet I'm right.

    --
    If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
    1. Re:Here's an Early Prediction about Quark/OS X. by TheDredd · · Score: 1

      Quark has a history of shoddy work, draconion copy-protection methods
      The problem with Quark is that they should have spendt a little more time on improving the software, with new features, workflow etc. Instead they have wasted most of there time improving the copy protection schemes, which will start to piss of users

      The result is a stone age product with a Quartz GUI, but with a lunatic registration, activation scheme

  86. Re:Who cares? by Jerrry · · Score: 1

    Sounds like some of the early adopters may have a valid false advertising claim based on the "runs flawlessly" statement on Apple's web site.

  87. Crappity Crap by Super+Grover · · Score: 1

    QuarkXPress has deservedly gained a reputation for reliable printing, offering consistent and dependable output that prevents costly mistakes.

    That's gotta be a typo - I'm sure it was supposed to say "causes costly mistakes."

    --
    Salsa Shark. We're gonna need a bigger boat.
  88. ... about QuarkXPress ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I can post knowledgeably about this subject, as I used to work for Quark, and my NDA just expired.

    First off, Quark makes money by keeping the cost-to-switch (to InDesign or anything else) as high as possible.

    As others have pointed out, prepress and print people are very hesitant to change anything. This also goes for the "plugins" (they're called XTensions) that many publishers use to add functionality to QuarkXPress.

    XTensions developers, who pay for the privilege of using the API, are always finding customers for older versions of their QuarkXPress XTensions -- they don't need a new version of XPress to make business richer. Odds are, though, that they've already got a port in the works.

    QuarkXPress costs what it does because that's what people will pay for it, and not because it's worth the price.

    To really break the cost-to-switch argument, folks should switch to InDesign while the switching is cheap. Quark, unlike Adobe, is unprepared to maintain and improve the application over time, imho.

    I could say a lot more, but not much else needs to be said on this one. Don't buy QuarkXPress. Your money would only be going to fatten an Iranian that moved all the jobs overseas (Fred).

    Fred Ebrahimi is a pompous asshole. Maybe this is enough to make him desirable outside of the states (France?). If so, you can have him.

    Just don't let him come back here to Denver. We've just now gotten his stench out of upper downtown, after all this time.

  89. Has everyone forgot about 'Classic' mode in OS X? by diatonic · · Score: 2, Informative

    since the latest G4's don't boot into OS 9, rendering them useless for Quark.

    People keep saying this... but Quark 4 & 5 ran fine in Classic mode within OS X. Don't get me wrong, I think it is way overdue to have a native OS X version of Quark... but you didn't have to boot OS 9 to run existing Quark versions.

    .:diatonic:.

  90. I am brain dead: mTropolis by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 1

    ... was the app I meant to mention. It was pronounced 'metropolis' and I just did a stream-of-consciousness thing there.

    --
    If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
  91. Quark have some serious problems by Hackie_Chan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Quark Xpress were one of the first Carbon applications demonstrated back in the introduction of Mac OS X on how easy and quick it would be to port existing applications to the new system.

    They were really wrong appearantly.

    --

    What's so bad about being lazy? What if there was a war and nobody showed up?
    1. Re:Quark have some serious problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, that wasn't a Carbon port of QuarkXPress. It was a smoke and mirror show. A very basic application that acted like QuarkXPress but didn't have much functionality.

  92. Indesign has little market share by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll admit Indesign has a bunch of fancy features that Quark doesn't, but Quark has been the industry standard for ages.

    I came accross one client who used Indesign and it was such a pain in the ass. People should stick to the standard, it causes to much pain in the end. If it works, why change?

    1. Re:Indesign has little market share by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People should stick to the standard, it causes to much pain in the end. If it works, why change?

      With an attitude like that, you don't deserve to use a Mac. Post your address and I will stop by to pick it up and leave a whitebox running XP in its place-- because you really should "stick to the standard."

  93. Yeah and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    kernel 2.4.21 is being released tomorrow.. oh, it can be true at last, Marcello is going mad about it!

  94. Re:I wish you were right, but... by DavidinAla · · Score: 1

    I actually wish you were right, but I don't think so. I use QuarkXPress for quite a number of things I do, and I'm still running 4.04 in Mac OS X's Classic mode. Here's the bad thing from Adobe's point of view. I have had InDesign 2.0.1 on my Mac for quite some time, but I haven't used it for a single project yet. Why? Two reasons. 1) I know how to crank something out in QuarkXPress very quickly. I'm sure I could use InDesign to do just as well, but I ALREADY know how to use XPress. When I'm ready to do a job, I use the tool I already know. And when I'm NOT doing a job, the last thing I want to do is learn new software. 2) When I burn a job onto a CD to give to a printer, I KNOW that any printer I deal with can deal with a QuarkXPress file. I don't personally know of a printing company near me that is using InDesign yet. I've been asking the people I deal with. They seem to know what InDesign is, but they're in no hurry to support it.

    For these reasons, I suspect that Quark will sell many, many copies of XPress. I can't stand the company, but I suspect that others will keep using their product, for reasons similar to mine.

  95. Dear Apple: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear Apple:

    I bought an Apple computer because of its native support for teledildonics. I bought a USB FUFME and MacOS immediately recognized it and installed drivers instantly! As a gay Catholic priest who often can't be at the altar all the time, you can understand how the ability to have sex with children whilst on the airplane with my Powerbook and wireless internet service is a lifesaver.

    I just have a single question, will Apple be releasing a firewire version of the FUFME anytime soon?

    With much gayness,

    Father "Michael" Harris

  96. Flashbacks ? I should be so lucky by tmark · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Anyone else getting a flashback

    Forget Diablo II. I'm having anticipatory nightmares about the problems the first OS X version of Quark is going to have.

    My wife runs a graphic design company that is all on Macs running OS 9, and they just bought a stockpile of the G4s that will still run OS 9 before Apple shuts the door on OS9 completely. The reason ? They're having a hell of a time with the new OS X software, and a hell of a time getting it OSX to do the things they want to do. From Filemaker to Photoshop to simple things like printing, it's been a nightmare for them. There are *lots* of things that don't "just work".

    Not to mention, when I went to *boot* her new G3 iBook into OS X for the first time, the damn thing locked up and would no longer boot, even off the CD, just presenting some weird message to cycle the power. You'd think this would be covered under Apple's warranty - hell, if the computer crashes when you do exactly what it says in the booklet, there's something wrong and it should be fixed under warranty - but she had to call her service company up, and pay for their time during which they pulled the drive and had to do a fresh install of the whole thing. What did they tell her ? They recommended that she *not run OSX* !! Her service company also SELLS Macs, by the way.

    It's telling when people are buying older computers just because they don't want to get pushed kicking and screaming into the latest thing.

    1. Re:Flashbacks ? I should be so lucky by seamelt · · Score: 1

      when I went to *boot* her new G3 iBook into OS X for the first time, the damn thing locked up and would no longer boot, even off the CD, just presenting some weird message to cycle the power
      thats 10.2's kernel panic message and it is covered by the warranty if it is a hardware issue (you get 90 days free phone support from apple and a 1 year hardware warranty

      if you are going to trash the company at least make sure what you say is true

      and as for things not "just working" in 10.2 all those prepress people have to realize that OS X is not OS 9 was not meant to be OS 9 and if you are approaching things in the OS as if it were OS 9 of course it isn't going to work

      die OS 9 die!!!!

    2. Re:Flashbacks ? I should be so lucky by dave1212 · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear. Learn the OS a bit. Buy the Mac OS X Hints book. Print people, you will have to learn, sooner or later.

      Though I am buying a newer powermac that will boot 9, I don't run it for anything more than Poser, a light 3D program.

  97. Dear Father Harris: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear Father Harris:

    Thank you for your kind letter! Being a former Catholic priest myself, I know exactly what you are talking about! It has been our dream at Apple

    Computers ever since we began in the 80's to shape the homosexual experience with the ultimate computer.

    I can answer your letter by saying that YES we will indeed be making a firewire version of the FUFME. With the additional bandwidth offered by the firewire bus, we will be able to more accurately record and deliver more minute and subtle movements that the USB FUFME simply couldnt support due to lack of bandwidth. You will be able to recognize our firewire FUFME in stores by the fancy holographic logo of a cock entering an Apple.

    We are glad to help loyal customers such as yourself. If you ever have any more questions, feel free to drop a line (or connect to my teledildonic FUFME server on fufme://cockman.apple.com).

    Hugh G. Cockman
    President
    Homosexual Liaison Services
    Apple Computer, Inc.

  98. Yay! Um... by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    I've never used Quark and don't reckon I'd drop nearly a grand for such a tool even if I were running OSX, but I'm just curious... every visual page layout program I've used to date has been much more of a pain in the ass to use than the results justified. Even your average everyday word processors (Word, Staroffice, etc) require an incredible amount of dicking around, to the point where I'd rather edit HTML by hand than deal with their crap.

    Does Quark suck less? Does it suck enough less to actually justify that price tag if you're in an industry that needs that kind of layout power? If I were in the industry, I'd be tempted to get the local LaTeX guru to throw together some macros, take all stories in ASCII plain text, and let LaTeX put the paper together. I have yet to try a WYSWYG tool that can match LaTeX for ease of use or quality of output.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:Yay! Um... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A professional layout program is a far cry from Word or some such garbage. Quark and Indesign (A personal fav) offer much more in the way of control and typography. Your not building a webpag for christs sake.

    2. Re:Yay! Um... by mnot · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, it does. Once you're used to Quark, you can never, never go back; it is the god of its particular niche. It defines the niche.

      Unfortunately, it's produced by one of the most greedy, stupid, self-defeating companies existant; they go out of their way to piss their own customers off. It's a real testament to the quality of the Quark the product that people will put up with Quark the company, despite there being reasonable alternatives available.

    3. Re:Yay! Um... by darkgreen · · Score: 4, Informative
      Actually, it sucks quite a bit less. There are very big differences between LaTex, Word, etc - same differences between a shareware photo-retouching program and Photoshop.

      With Quark and InDesign, the focus is not so much organization by context of content, but presentation of content. The ability to lay out a photo-laden text book that will be printed with 6 colours, with a 15-page index at the end and a table of contents is something that i wouldn't trust to a word processor, precisely the same reasoning behind using a site-management tool or a database to drive certain websites, rather than editing 400 pages individually in vi.

      imagine having to create an issue of National Geographic using Staroffice. Not the right tool - not the best thing to get the job done.

      if you're talking about an instruction manual - sure, LaTex is an option, just as using Lilypond is one for setting music.

      quark and InDesign, however, are special tools, with more depth than most casual users need - the professional that needs it, however, /really/ needs it.

      --
      You don't need Geeksintraining if you're on Slashdot.
    4. Re:Yay! Um... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Moronic nerd post of the day!

      Quark is used to layout stuff like that issue of Maxim you've been drooling over or that Amazon.com ad in the Sunday paper. Its used to layout and design major publications with absolute accuracy.

      You don't make goddam webpages with it (I guess you could) of type up your resume. LaTeX? Let me guess, you're an engineering major posting from the dorm room?

    5. Re:Yay! Um... by questamor · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've never used Quark and don't reckon I'd drop nearly a grand for such a tool even if I were running OSX, but I'm just curious... every visual page layout program I've used to date has been much more of a pain in the ass to use than the results justified

      It's not the tool for you then, if LaTeX can give you what you need. XPress has been -the- tool (despite it being painful in a few areas) for creating magazines, newspapers and pro publications, for a long time. Pick a magazine you like, and it's almost certainly laid out in XPress. Most newspapers, most brochures, most anything professional print. It's not -meant- for producing small school leaflets, or scientific papers, or a resumé or letter to the family.

      If you really wanted an example, Compare a standard desktop PC to IBM room-sized big iron, and that's the same kind of comparison as Word/Publisher is to XPress.

    6. Re:Yay! Um... by MS_is_the_best · · Score: 1

      Nope, you and some others here are wrong. Latex can do all the stuff Quark can. Before computers were powerful enough for Indesign/Quark/Pagemaker etc troff already provided a proper layout engine.

      Furthermore the nature of *nix is that all small tools for converting and incorporating other bits are already there (multichanneling ancestor awk and such).

      However it is not easy! If I want some sort of strange envelop format I have to do some programming, if I want some weird color calibration idem. And I think I can do most stuff, however... I can't make a nice layout. The people who can do that can't use latex the way I do.

      There is definately a use for Quark and consorts and that is (relative..) usefriendliness without too much hacking.

      But do not underestimate the value of latex+unix tools.

    7. Re:Yay! Um... by LMariachi · · Score: 1
      I can't make a nice layout. The people who can do that can't use latex the way I do.[...] [D]o not underestimate the value of latex+unix tools.

      It should go without saying that when discussing layout software, the ability to "make a nice layout" is paramount. Using LaTeX is akin to writing postscript by hand. Sure, it's possible, and it may satisfy your inner nerd, but you won't be meeting any deadlines.

  99. This is *NIX exciting by Uber+Banker · · Score: 1

    So Q XPress is on a (albeit closed) BSD based platform... will it be hard to map this across to other BSDs, then other *NIXs.

    Yeah yeah, not easy, but an interesting reverse engineer tinker possibility.

    If Apple put OSX on x86 platforms, then it would kick ass (almost as much as Slackware and EMACS etc misc Linux pleasing comments).

    1. Re:This is *NIX exciting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Are you a troll, or just an idiot?

      1. QuarkXPress is written in Carbon, which is a direct descendent of the Macintosh Toolbox. There are no Carbon implementations for other operating systems, nor, realistically, can there ever be.

      2. It will not be hard to port QuarkXPress to another UNIX. It will be impossible.

      3. It will not be an interesting tinker project. It will be a profoundly dull one, because the answer is immediately obvious: no.

      4. Apple will not port Mac OS X to anything other than the Macintosh family of computers because Apple is not a software company. Apple is a hardware company.

      If you have been alive for more than about fifteen minutes, you'd know the answers to these questions. So you're either an idiot, or a particularly bad troll.

    2. Re:This is *NIX exciting by larry+bagina · · Score: 1
      he's an idiot, but I don't see why there couldn't be a reimplementation of carbon (ala gnustep/openstep and wine/windows). I know the original macintosh OS and toolbox allowed direct memory access that memory protected systems don't allow, but i thought Carbon cleaned up most of that....

      The last time i skimmed through some darwin source code (for hfschk, IIRC), NewPointer, NewHandle, etc, were re-implemented as C frontends to malloc.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    3. Re:This is *NIX exciting by pmcgrane · · Score: 1

      From time to time it's mentioned that QuickTime for Windows allegedly runs on ported bits of the classic Mac OS. This is often used to explain QuickTime's mediocrity on Windows (maybe explains its mediocrity on OS X too). Quark for QuickTime!

    4. Re:This is *NIX exciting by thedbp · · Score: 1

      Don't hold your breath.

      Actually, on second thought, do that. Yeah, there ya go. Keep going.

      Hold on, I'm going to get some tape.

      Keep going!

    5. Re:This is *NIX exciting by Uber+Banker · · Score: 1

      HAND

  100. Respect your elders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With that sort of reaction you prove beyond a reasonable doubt, that you are a mature, capable adult!

    Three cheers for Doctor Groove!

    1) Give specifics, and maybe people won't assume such things based on your 10th grade writing style.

    2) You might as well post as an AC, since you aren't really doing anything beyond giving a childish name to your slashdot persona. (Put a profile, give a URL)

    3) Of course, I am speaking from a BUBBLE ENVIRONMENT of a UNI-VERIS-ITY!

    But please don't assume anything about me, because THE LESS YOU ASSUME, THE BETTER OFF YOU ARE!

  101. DVD Packaging by Josuah · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The image on Apple's home page seems to have Quark Xpress in DVD-like packaging. Is that how it really comes? I would love if all software moved over to that kind of much more compact packaging. And I could also hide my GameCube games on the same shelf.

  102. Maybe if.... by zogger · · Score: 1

    Maybe if all you quark using people/shops would all chip in and pay a couple of programmers to design or work on an open source equivalent? How many current quark customers are there, hundreds of thousands? 100$ a piece per shop towards some core developer programmers might do the trick, doncha think, at least to get it the ball rolling on something just as good and free and open source? Start it on source forge, or something, seems like out there must be something that would do for a start.

    1. Re:Maybe if.... by Metrol · · Score: 2, Informative

      Start it on source forge, or something, seems like out there must be something that would do for a start.

      It's already started. Tell ya the truth, it ain't half bad. It's no Quark or InDesign, but it's still pretty decent. It's called Scribus and I just installed it here on my FreeBSD box.

      Pretty screen shots here.

      Problem is, no matter how good Scribus gets there's still the little matter of something to replace Illustrator, and some kind of graphics app that can deal with CMYK. Still, it's one heck of a start at it! Just gotta love open source.

      --
      The line must be drawn here. This far. No further.
  103. Re:Err... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm afraid I don't see the point of the Diablo comment.

    Blizzard took their "sweet ass time" relative to the Wintel version, which was shipping for several months before the Mac version (see also Tony Hawk v 1-4, Sims, etc, etc, etc ad infinitum).

    As near as I can tell, it's not like Quark has been busting out Windows versions of their app or did they secretly release 6 for XP months ago? (All you little buggers who nicked pre-releases off KaZaa not withstanding.)

  104. Re:ANAL VIETNAM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice try jysmsyp.

  105. Re:Err... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It even has some familiar Quark-style features (like the infamous boxes to place images and text in).

    Erm. That's not exactly a feature. If you're doing page layout, how else would you deal with elements than by putting them in frames?

  106. Re:Has everyone forgot about 'Classic' mode in OS by araemo · · Score: 1
    since the latest G4's don't boot into OS 9, rendering them useless for Quark.
    People keep saying this... but Quark 4 & 5 ran fine in Classic mode within OS X. Don't get me wrong, I think it is way overdue to have a native OS X version of Quark... but you didn't have to boot OS 9 to run existing Quark versions.

    It may RUN fine...
    but try setting up printers/scanners etc. with drivers for both OS X and OS 9 in the same box.. gets hairy quickly(and what if your printer doesn't have OS X drivers.. you upgrade.. whoops, this new one doesn't have OS 9 drivers.. thats another possible problem). And the graphic designers who use this stuff don't want to have to play with the chooser or the OSX stuff, AND have to keep it straight, while they should be printing and working on something else.
  107. Re:Very Pricey... by fritter · · Score: 2, Funny

    Quickbooks Pro?!?!? iTunes is free!!!!

  108. Re:Has everyone forgot about 'Classic' mode in OS by araemo · · Score: 1

    Oh, and theres the possibility(I don't know for sure, I don't read the rumor sites for apple stuff) that they're completely removing OS 9 from the hard drives, rather than merely crippling it. Without OS 9 installed, there IS no classic mode.

  109. Re:Has everyone forgot about 'Classic' mode in OS by mslinux · · Score: 1

    You're joking right???

    OS X Classic mode sucks big time. Sorry to burst your bubble, but emulation ain't the real thing. It causes more problems than it fixes. It's been a nightmare trying to make apps work in classic mode, and when I say work, I mean 80 to 85% functionality(fonts, printing, scanning, etc.)

    Besides, rumor has it that Apple is going to dump classic mode one day soon. And I thought MS was bad... that was before I used a Mac.

  110. the mac is quark by tfosheim · · Score: 1

    i work in publishing as an editor, and I have to say that quark for x is bigger than most of you seem to imagine. Most publishing houses still run quark 3,33 from waaay back. Why? Because when you do a print run for a million books or so it had better work, and 3,33 works. Publishing could care less for a new os, what they care about is new tools - like this one. And since it is for OS X, its good for apple too. Now the last excuse has gone, even though publishing will probably still stick to their 603e macs and quark 3,33 for a while yet ...

    Oh. And Quark is usually twice the price for 6x, so $899 is actually ann amazing price as well ...

    1. Re:the mac is quark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an Editor? My God, that's terrifying.

  111. Re:Very Pricey... by Jessamy · · Score: 1

    For around the same price as Quark XPress 6 (after the slimmed down introductory pricing) you can get the Adobe Print Package (InDesign 2 + Illustrator 10 + Photoshop 7 + Acrobat 6) for $1199.

    --
    Linux is free only if your time is worth nothing.
  112. Linux support? News?? by axxackall · · Score: 1

    No Linux version of Quark Xpress for Linux so far? Apple made Quark Xpress only for Apple OS? That's not a news. I knew it before. Tell me what I did not know yet.

    --

    Less is more !
    1. Re:Linux support? News?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      um, what?

    2. Re:Linux support? News?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're retarded. Oh, sorry, you already knew that.

  113. And in other news... by di0s · · Score: 1

    Hell was a nippy 40 degrees and my toilet flushed in the other direction... more news as it becomes available.

  114. try MOL by axxackall · · Score: 1
    I used Quark Express (5 or older - don't remember) the version for "classic" MacOS on my G4 underl MOL (Mac-on-Linux). That way I used "classic" Mac applications running the best modern OS - Linux!!!

    The prerformance was fine. And it worked stable. It never crashed the "main" OS (Linux). And it much less often crashed its shelling OS (MacOS9), in fact just one time - compare it to booting MacOS9 and count how many times you have to reset your Mac per day!

    --

    Less is more !
  115. Dont Wait by cybercuzco · · Score: 1

    Apple releases some new hardware every 3-6 months. 970 rumors have been around for over a year now. Since apple refreshes each product in their lineup about every year, chances are, when you buy something, something better will come along with in 12 months, usually much less. So if you need it, buy it, and dont worry if the 970 comes out in a month, because by then there will be rumors that the 980, or whatever the next processor is is right around the corner so just wait a few months, at which time there will be rumors about the 990.... ad infinitum.

    --

    1. Re:Dont Wait by phillymjs · · Score: 3, Informative

      Apple releases some new hardware every 3-6 months. 970 rumors have been around for over a year now.

      Yeah, but the G4 towers are loooooong overdue for a major revamp, and within the last two or three days Apple has released the lawyers on a couple rumor sites who had some fairly detailed writeups about forthcoming 970-based machines. Apple may not comment on unreleased products, but when the Cease & Desist orders start flying, it usually means the rumor sites got a little too much correct.

      Either way, we find out in less than two weeks, and it won't kill anyone who's in the market for a new Mac to wait that much longer-- but it might kill them if they buy one of the current G4s and a week later Apple releases brand new machines with significantly more bang for the same buck. (Okay, it won't kill them, but they'll probably be pretty pissed off. :-)

      ~Philly

    2. Re:Dont Wait by John+Harrison · · Score: 1
      Usually I would agree with you and say, "Just buy whatever is out right now that suits your needs. Don't worry about something better being released in a month."

      However, this is not simply a product refresh, bumping up the GHz a bit. This is a substantial change in performance and architecture. It seems like waiting long enough to know the impact of that change might be worthwhile.

  116. More about mTropolis by faust2097 · · Score: 1

    I worked for a company that was a mTropolis beta site and I really miss that program. At the time [1996] it was leaps and bouds ahead of Director. They were mired by both an absurd retail price [$5000 when it was released] and the fact that everyone was used to the Director timeline-based model for interactive media. Object oriented logic is tough for a lot of programmers.

    Anyway, it's s shame Quark ran it into the ground, it had a lot of promise.

    1. Re:More about mTropolis by Pope · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I investigated mTropolis for my company back when it came out. We stuck with Director.
      mT wanted to compete with Director, but kept their price in the neighbourhood that Authorware lived. THe problem was that Quark started making Immedia, which was to be a Director competitor, bought mT, and killed them both.

      I still have the installer CD for mT lying around too, along with Apple's SK8 project... :)

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
  117. IT HAS BEGONE!!!! by Thaidog · · Score: 1

    ...and stuff... ehm.. sorry..

    --

    ||| I still can't believe Parkay's not butter.

  118. Re:Err... by mholt108 · · Score: 1

    you just put directly on the page - it is the frame idea that is a little left field

  119. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    who needs Xpress? TeX kicks it's ass 7 days a week.

  120. Yeah, really, WHY? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TeX and Linux is all a body needs. Heck, comments.pl is all a body needs.

  121. Re:Very Pricey... by Brendor · · Score: 2, Insightful
    While this has been said, comparing PS and Xpress is like comparing Apples and Oranges. Think of the your standard movie poster, magazine page, or album art.

    The parts of the composition that have dynamic ranges (usually reproduced photographs) are usually created or edited in a photo editing program, often photoshop. Any "straight" text (Not blurred or manipulated) is positioned and controlled using Xpress/ InDesign/ Pagemaker.

    As you know, Photoshop is because it makes it so intuitive to edit selected parts of an image in whatever way you desire, without knowledge of f-stops, tonal range and lens filters

    Quark's Xpress allows a blend of very intuitive text placement, and a framework for remarkably precise control of any attributes, such as spacing, size, color et all. Quark also has optional numeric placement (think X-Y coordinates), as well as shape/outline tools. Any shape can be used as a container for imported/linked images of several formats, as well as text.

    None of this changes the fact that Quark Xpress is sort of kludgey. But it's kludgey in a very unique way, that once you're used to it, everything else seems foreign. Sort of like Windows :-)

    Finally, as a young NYC designer (who uses PCs + Macs at work), I can assure you that even the "low" prices charged by small/bargain companies make Quark look affordable fast. Want to create/sell adhesive vinyl signs, such as those featured on storefront windows, Hot-Dog Pushcarts and the doors of commercial vehicles? You're looking at $800 for the low cost version of the software, and at least $1500 for a small 24" plotter/cutter.

  122. What a NOVEL idea!!! by JasdonLe · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Quark's website lists the following as one of the new features: Multiple Undos. Multiple Undos. Hello. It's 2003 and we just added multiple undos. Did any of you actually make the Quark upgrade from 4 to 5? IMO, the *worst* "upgrade" since Kings Quest VI (and yes, I think that's a fair comparison). The just *didn't* code in multiple undos. I guess it just wasn't a high enough priority (Nor was OS X compatibilty, or image support other than TIFF, EPS and PDF (Why PDF?), or in-line image support, or automatic column separator lines, or... stop me now, please.) The fact is that anyone who used InDesign for longer than two weeks would burn every copy of Quark Xpress they owned and never look back. --JasdonLe

    --
    ** A Sketch a Week **
    http://www.sketchplease.com
  123. What a NOVEL idea! by JasdonLe · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Quark's website lists the following as one of the new features:

    Multiple Undos.

    Multiple Undos. Hello. It's 2003 and we just added multiple undos.

    Did any of you actually make the Quark upgrade from 4 to 5? IMO, the *worst* "upgrade" since Kings Quest VI (and yes, I think that's a fair comparison). The just *didn't* code in multiple undos. I guess it just wasn't a high enough priority (Nor was OS X compatibilty, or image support other than TIFF, EPS and PDF (Why PDF?), or in-line image support, or automatic column separator lines, or... stop me now, please.)

    The fact is that anyone who used InDesign for longer than two weeks would burn every copy of Quark Xpress they owned and never look back.

    --JasdonLe

    --
    ** A Sketch a Week **
    http://www.sketchplease.com
  124. Just use Emacs instead by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1
    More powerfull and already available.

  125. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    are you really that fucking stupid? Are you trolling?

    Linux... modern OS! thats rich

    - E. Horsecock

  126. Re:Err... by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

    Although now that Q6 is out, I gotta go pick up a copy, just to check it out.

    Having used it for a week now, faster and more stable are the significant improvements. It's nice of them to fix some of the Qirks, but in the process they seem to have introduced some new ones.

    Acrobat 6 rocked my world a few weeks ago (more properer on-screen RIP and non-sucking preflight capabilities) and about an order of magnitude more than Quirk 6.

    --
    There are 1.1... kinds of people.
  127. Re:Err... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you just put directly on the page

    Sure, if RageMaker or MS Publisher float your boat.

  128. quark is the syquest of new decade. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'm an art director at one of the largest ad agencies in the country and we've switched to indesign 2 and have been happily moving forward for almost a year. it was a bit slow at the get go and it was very hard to make the transition. but now that everyone's up to speed on indesign, i don't think i could switch back.

    the additional features built into indesign really smoke quark. proper eps rendering, being able to import .psd files, etc etc. you can't understand how great it is to be able to use .psd files in your layouts. you don't have to flatten out files and have two separate picture files and have to go back to your layered file to create a useable file for quark. that was one of the most painful aspects of quark and with indesign it auto-updates most of the time.

    plus, quark is incredibly arrogant and i simply don't want to support them anymore. i hope other agencies follow our lead as we were one of the first test sites for a mass migration to indesign and i was one of the first AD's to switch over. there are a couple small workflow issues with ID that are hard to adjust to, but the other advantages outweigh them.

  129. I beg to differ. by rodentia · · Score: 1

    In point of fact, there is relatively little that Quark does that LaTeX and comparable, proprietary pagination engines cannot. Those few features that aren't supported are typically used to facilitate contorted, anxious and befuddled layout and the routine abuse of typeforms. Indeed, we are not far from XML/SVG layout systems which will finally eliminate the middling DTP market (Quark, InDesign), unless our tastes have been so abused that we no longer recognize quality in page composition.

    If you give it a moment's thought, I think you can recognize that using Quark is rather a lot like editing 400 pages individually in vi, only with lots of little buttons. Quark's claim to greatness is its WYSIWYG system, but it was implementated in such a slipshod manner (best example, the complete divergence between picture and text boxes) that it seriously hinders the software growing with its primary markets. There is the catalog of Xtensions which reads like a testament to Quark's failures: H&J, flow constraints, templating limitations, data import and export. Finally, last I looked, XML support was profoundly limited by some childish assumptions about the technology. That alone should (I pray God) ensure that this rev of Quark is the last.

    Power to the people and PDF to the presses!

    --
    illegitimii non ingravare
  130. Speaking of porting apps vs real OS layout apps. by ahfoo · · Score: 1

    I've been spending quite a bit of time looking at using DocBook and CSS to do layout for a book. If you read the documents they seem to suggest they offer much more than Quark. I downloaded a demo of Quark and I thought the OS alternatives had a good point. Can any of you Mac fans explain where the Mac solution would put DocBook/CSS to shame.

  131. Adobe for a fraction of Quark by djtripp · · Score: 1

    Well, I'd say that the fact that you can get InDesign for a fraction of the price of Quark XPress is a boon to Adobe. Now we can just wait for ID3 to come out and Quark will once again be behind.

    On a side note, It's a boon for Apple that Quark has finally gotten their head out of their arse, but it's a day late and a dollar short...

    --
    "This is you left and that's your left. This is your right and that's your right. You're gonna die!
  132. I use Quark 4.10 by MickLinux · · Score: 1

    I use Quark 4.10 in prepublishing; I decided against upgrading to Quark 5, since it didn't offer anything needed [Quark 4 is fine], and all my computers are slow [fastest is 400 Mhz, but I also have 333, and 240].

    Now Quark 6 is coming out, and I'm looking at this and thinking "I can't afford all new computers. I'm going to have to stick with 4.10".

    But then I saw your post. Maybe sticking with 4.10 *is* best.

    But you know what I'd really like? I'd like a real, web-based, open-source EPS-based document processor.

    I had moved to Lithuania, in order to take advantage in the difference in labor expenses, and I used to think that I'd get far enough ahead that I could develop this. However, after 1 year of problems with immigration, 2 years of slave-driving teaching schedules [I have to have *reason* to be here, and the reason was a teaching job for $250/month, but 40 hours became 80 hours. That's done, now that we've incorporated] followed by the deliberate devaluation of the American dollar, and I begin to think that we'll never get it produced.

    I just don't have the assets.

    Indeed, I begin to think that my greatest chances of going out of business aren't coming.

    Oh, well. It could've been good -- that's life.

    Anyhow, Quark's mismanagement seems to be mismatched by mismanagement the world over, from the bottom up, or the top on down. Fortunately we have the FSCOree Software Foundation and Linux. Maybe that'll survive.

    --
    Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
  133. Too little, too late by Mighlo · · Score: 1

    Waddayaknow

    Three weeks ago, the graphics people at my add-agency gave up waiting for Quark for OSX, and bit the bullet and learned InDesign.

    Quark really blew it with this one. The people we have were very happy with it, even though it was old & clunky.

  134. No loyalty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Loyal?! I can see you aren't a Quark user. Quark users HATE the company for their laziness, and are practically BEGGING Adobe to get InDesign right so we have a real alternative.

  135. Hate/Love by theolein · · Score: 1

    This is both a Troll and flamebait... and some wisdom perhaps. Recently I had to use Quirk again after years of gratefully not having had anything to do with them. (The last time I had anything to do with Quirk was when they killed mTropolis out of sheer stupidity and the user base spent about 6 months trying to get enough money together to buy the code from Quirk, who wanted $1 million, and eventually gave up).

    Quirk xDress did the job I needed it to do recently without many problems and was a step above Pagemaker in things such a usage of Fonts and images. The precision is also very good and the printing is very flexible, as are trapping. But it was Quirk 4.1 and the search/replace still fucked up numerous times, just like it always has.

    But it "worked" which is exactly why Quirk has remained a staple of many printing shops. This doesn't change the fact that everybody hates Quirk and the whole world thinks Ebrahimi is a useless, greedy wanker.

    But it will take more than Xpress6 to get the Xpress4 users to switch. Most shops that have not switched to InDesign have at least one copy around, and would more than likely switch to that when that time finally comes.

    And finally... Fuck Quirk once again for killing mTropolis, I still dream about coding a replica myself today.

  136. Not Suprising That It Took So Long by thedbp · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think a lot of people are missing the really exciting parts about this release - not the "oh, finally" sentiment, but the reasons WHY it took so long.

    The huge reason, obviously, is that Quark is a Mach-O application. This is the most "native" an app can get in Mac OS X. Gives it the ability to run at a lower level and access more APIs than any other type of Mac OS X application. Quark 6 ONLY runs on Mac OS X 10.2 or higher. No 9 support at all. This means that Quark had to be overhauled and recoded pretty extensively. This isn't just a quick Carbon hack.

    Speaking of quick Carbon hacks, Adobe's InDesign, while I love working with it, suffers from just this problem. Doesn't take advantage of Services, is slow and kludgy to work with, and generally feels like an OS 9 application with an OS X theme. And 2 was not a huge improvement over 1.x speed-wise. Adobe would do well to take a cue from Quark and really optimize their programs for X instead of just getting them running.

    Beyond that, it looks as if the UI has undergone significant changes with many new menu options, reorganized menu options, and some very cool portable-content type tools and abilities that will make the entire design process smoother and allow graphic designers to worry less about file management and more about color matching and negative space. this can only mean better designed print material, which makes me happy. I can't stand half-assed media filling up the world's newsstands.

    1. Re:Not Suprising That It Took So Long by LMariachi · · Score: 1
      Are you perhaps too young to remember that it was Quark (well, DTP in general) that indirectly fucked up the aesthetics of so much of the print media sphere? For every Emigre magazine DTP enabled, there were seven thousand eyesore subway ads put together by people who thought that owning a copy of Quark made them "designers." Ooo, horizontal type scaling, neato!

      Before DTP, there may have been less innovative, bold experimentation in print design, but at least the mundane, quotidian stuff that's 95% of what we're surrounded by every day was done by actual professionals who knew what they were doing.

  137. ...Indesign by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

    There are going to be ~100 posts about "Oh who cares, I hate Quark. Everyone should use Indesign. Indesign rocks. It's going to father my babies. Quark stole my babies, and doesn't answer their phones. Apple doesn't need Quark."

    Apple does need Quark, just as Apple needs Photoshop no matter what uber-imaging-app might come out next week. Apple not having an OSX version of Quark has hurt them, and hurt OSX.

    So if you dig OSX, or have to do print at all... no matter what your feelings on Quark (either the company or the product) this is good news.

    Damn I hope it isn't half-assed though. But it will hopefully put the push on the rest of the printing eco-system to catch up over the next year and give OSX some momentum there.

    1. Re:...Indesign by pressman · · Score: 1

      Ok, InDesign is the shit. InDesign is awesome. I honestly think it's a better program than Quark XPress, but Adobe typically doesn't get things right until version 3.0.

      That said, XPress 6 is the single most important program out there for mass adoption of OS X. As much as I hate Quark the company, XPress is still the flagship print publishing application out there. InDesign has made some inroads, but Apple NEEDS XPress as much as it needs Photoshop.

      I won't trust XPress 6.0 until they've done at least 2 patches to it. They're first whole number releases are always atrocious, bug-ridden nightmares, but they fix them pretty quickly.

      THIS IS A BIG DEAL!

      --
      Pooty tweet
  138. Re:Huh? by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

    Quark 6 was promised around that time. About two or three years ago.

    Yeah, it was promised a long time ago. From what I've heard, though, some of what happened wasnt just with Quark... a LOT of developers got really pissed off at Apple right about then. Much of it was centered around feeling that Apple had misrepresented the maturity of 10.1, and that they were misrepresenting just "how easy" it was to get a very complex OS9 program over to OSX via Carbon... especially due to all of the bugs and missing functionality (a lot having to do with printing).

    Since a lot of it was supposed to be fixed in 10.2, a bunch of them just said "ok, we'll ship it for 10.2"... when exactly did photoshop 7 come out for OSX?

  139. Re:Err... by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

    It's done, bro. Version 2.0.2. Try using it. Unfortunately, many designers are just plain stuck with Quark because they refuse to try anything else

    FYI, while what you say has a lot of truth, there ARE those who have looked and been interested in switching but just couldn't for one reason or another. One 5-10 person shop I'm thinking of ran into a problem where the xtensions they needed for the specific kinds of textbooks they put out don't work with indesign... since 95% of what they do are those textbooks, no go.

  140. Re:Err... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you just put directly on the page

    How? You can't just throw something on the page without a bounding box of some kind. How else will the program know how to flow the text? How else will the program know how to wrap other elements around the text or picture?

    It's not possible to do page layout without frames. It simply can't be done.

    Now, you might imagine a program that hides the frames from you, somehow, but that's kind of hard to envision. One way or the other, you're going to have to get at them.

  141. Re:Err... by nycroft · · Score: 1

    but in the process they seem to have introduced some new ones.

    What kind of quirks? Have you been able to nail down anything specific? And about Acrobat 6...I haven't got it yet but I have to ask, can you print separations from it? If so, how is it?

    --
    Mr. Bond, they have a saying in Chicago: Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time is enemy action.
  142. Re:Err... by nycroft · · Score: 1

    How? You can't just throw something on the page without a bounding box of some kind. How else will the program know how to flow the text? How else will the program know how to wrap other elements around the text or picture?

    PageMaker allowed you to place an image or text without creating a frame first. This, in turn allowed the user to not have to worry about the frame ever getting bigger than the object that was in it; thus making alignment and text wrapping easier. The only time you would notice a "frame" is when you cropped an image. As for text, there were special text frames, but you still didn't have to create them first.

    InDesign sorta works like Quark. You may create a frame first, then place an image in it, or place the image on the page and it would create the frame for you. The cool thing that InDesign has (over Q5, at least) is the ability to fit the frame to the object inside it, and vice versa. Plus, with the alignment proxy in the Transform pallette, one can align that frame to any point by its center, left-bottom, left-top, right-center, etc. A minor feature, maybe, but it's pretty damn useful when making sure that images don't bleed over folds and things like that. I have yet to see if Q6 has anything like that.

    I'm not saying that one is definitely better than the other. As a pre-press tech, I had to learn every type of layout software there is (our shop never turns anything away, even Publisher *barf*). When I made the switch to OS X from 9 at home, InDesign was the only thing I could use, and I liked it a lot. That's all I'm sayin'.

    --
    Mr. Bond, they have a saying in Chicago: Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time is enemy action.
  143. Re:Err... by nycroft · · Score: 1

    Sure, if RageMaker or MS Publisher float your boat

    If you work in a decent Service Bureau that likes the business that customers bring in, they would have to float your boat. Automatic. If I turned a customer away because I thought they used the wrong layout software, I'd be out of business. Believe it or not, PageMaker still accounts for about 40% of our offset print production. InDesign is about 20% now. Quark? Yeah, about the same as PM.

    --
    Mr. Bond, they have a saying in Chicago: Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time is enemy action.
  144. Re:Err... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PageMaker allowed you to place an image or text without creating a frame first.

    PageMaker was also a primitive product that ultimately failed in the marketplace.

    See, the thing about PageMaker is that it DID use frames, it just kind of hid them. You still had to manipulate them. The program just made manipulating them kind of a pain in the ass.

  145. Re:Err... by nycroft · · Score: 1

    since 95% of what they do are those textbooks, no go.

    Sounds like a pretty specific clientele that shop has. My shop does everything from movie posters to business cards back to high-lacquer coffee-table books. If we didn't accept InDesign and PageMaker, we'd be out of business. I guess it really depends on what type of design you're privy to. For some, Quark works great. For others, InDesign is the way to go. As the Pre-press Operator, I must use them all. I like them all, too, but for different reasons.

    --
    Mr. Bond, they have a saying in Chicago: Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time is enemy action.
  146. Alternatives? by Funksaw · · Score: 1

    I could use a print authoring tool like Quark, but I really can't afford $900 for it. $900 is more than my entire budget.

    I'd pay $250 or so for Adobe Pagemaker (and actually prefer it,) but there's no Pagemaker for OSX...

    Right now I'm using Appleworks. :(

    Are there any other alternatives out there for just basic print page design on OSX?

    -- Funksaw

  147. Re: Waiting by Don+Cron · · Score: 1
    Hold off on purchasing new hardware for a few weeks to see if the 970 rumours are true. How dumb would it be to hold off this long only to purchase new hardware at the worst possible time?

    "The present" is always the worst possible time to purchase new hardware.

    "Three months from now" is a good time to buy new hardware.

    Some consider "this time next year" to be an even better time to buy new hardware.

    -Don

  148. Two years to develop, two weeks to become obsolete by TCQuad · · Score: 1

    Built for Mac OS X Jaguar So, basically, it'll be outdated by the time Panther is debuted at the WWDC?

  149. Re:I wish you were right, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You really ought to give ID a spin. I have dozens of projects in QuarkXPress on my hard drive, but after I was "forced" to move to OS X (my boss got a new PowerBook, which was OS X only, and since I was going to have to provide support for him I figured I might as well move over myself), I started noodling around with InDesign. It takes about two solid hours of experimentation to get the hang of the interface differences, but after that I haven't seen anything I couldn't handle.

    I'm doing 5.5 x 8.5 inch color brochures, instructional booklets, and labels of varying size for output on both paper and Flexo. I work with printers in Washington State, Canada, Texas and Hong Kong and have only found one (the Flexo place) that couldn't take an InDesign file, and for them I just output to EPS.

    I dislike Quark as a company and really jumped at a chance to leave their software behind. I don't think I'll miss their product at all.

    Andrew

  150. Re: Waiting by John+Harrison · · Score: 1
    Don,

    Please see my other post in this thread, explaining my thoughts on the subject. I have dealt with this issue since my C=64 and I have always simply bought a new computer when I needed it. I looked for the best deal I could find at the time, knowing that within two weeks I would happen across an even better deal. I really think this is a special situation. I work for IBM and I might even buy myself another Mac when the new ones come out depending on performance and price.

  151. Re:Very Pricey... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another faultless piece of work. Watching all the Steve-Jobbers rush into line to correct you was even better than watching the Grammar Nazi posse respond to the intentionally-badly-written grammar-correcting trolls.

  152. Quark does this kind of thing by theolein · · Score: 1

    The "Stop calling us a bunch of fuckheads or we won't speak to you" mentality is very prevalent at Quark. When the mTropolis userbase were trying to get the money together to buy the code from Quark, one of the conditions that Quark stipulated in buying the code is that people would have to "stop making derogatory comments about Quark". Every was in a hate frenzy about Quark fucking up mTropolis the way it did (no aid for the developers, no advertising, nothing and then just killing it) and even though most of us stopped bad mouthing Quark immediately, the effort was in vain, because Quark was more interested in killing the product than letting others show that it was as good as we all thought.

  153. He's talking about Quark 4.01 by douglasq · · Score: 1

    That version had a pointlessly complex installation/registration process. They actually wanted you to mail in a floppy with the registration info. Dumb. (This was true for the Mac version, as well.)

    --
    "Form should follow function...unless it's just plain ugly."
  154. Use InDesign to Send PDFs to Printers by kleinmatic · · Score: 1

    I read a lot of posts claiming that Quark is the lingua franca of the printer/service bureau world. I use InDesign quite a bit, but I use its excellent built in PDF export feature when I'm sending files to a printer. That's more reliable and preferable in every way to sending application files anyway (I don't have to send fonts, external graphics, there's no way to gain/lose lines, etc). It's quickly becoming industry standard in the magazine world, at least. And QuarkXPress is not particularly good at it.

    I'm not saying that Quark doesn't have a huge advantage with their market share, but with the shabby way they're treating their corporate customers, there's got to be a better reason to stay on Quark than "it's what my vendors use."

  155. Re: Waiting by Don+Cron · · Score: 1
    John,

    It's true, there may be a major architecture shift in the near future. I don't doubt that you've seen this before and your procurement strategy is sound. But I don't think the situation with new PowerPC's is particularly special.

    Consider:

    • DDR-400 motherboards have just recently become available - is now the time to buy an Athlon XP system?
    • AMD-64 boards and processors are close at hand - should a prospective buyer wait?
    • Intel's Itanium2 processors will jump from 3MB to 6MB of L3 cache this year - should a prospective buyer wait for that revision?
    • nVidia and ATI are moving to GDDR3 RAM for their next generation graphics cards - should a prospectiver buyer wait for this leap in memory bandwidth?
    • nVidia's new graphics cards will migrate from the AGP8x interface to PCI-Express from Q4-2003 to Q1-2004 - should a prospective buyer make sure her motherboard purchases accomodate this forthcoming, untested, unreleased technology?

    I agree that 64-bit processing across the Mac platform, when it happens, will be a big deal. It may even be the most important development in computer hardware this year. But it will be surrounded by many other important developments in computer hardware.

    If the original poster is planning to select a hardware standard for the next twelve months, then it's probably worth waiting to see if the rumors are true (while doing other relevant research).

    If we're talking about a discrete purchase, there are clear advantages to buying the OSX-capable hardware available today vs. sticking with older, slower, out-of-warranty hardware.

    -Don

  156. Safari History by sandoz · · Score: 1

    Maybe now Quark.com will make it into the default Safari history population.

  157. Re:Err... by mholt108 · · Score: 1

    just the way that illustrator or pagemaker do it. You just put it there - it becomes its own bounding box. I still have trouble making quark do what i want after growing used to illustrator. Text is more difficult ot work with than graphics, but again, it is possible as is seen in illustrator.

  158. Re:Err... by mholt108 · · Score: 1

    PageMaker was also a primitive product that ultimately failed in the marketplace.

    Yes that is true - but you cant serously call quark (as it is mostly used in v3.2) an advanced product. It beauty is its simplicity and the fact that the older versions created clean postscript.

    In the words of my creativly brilliant yet technically inept friend "it is such a great little scrapbook program".

  159. how about SEPARATIONS? by ReignInBlood · · Score: 1

    well, LaTeX may be dandy for laying out text, but it doesn't support color seps, does it? you're definitely sunk in the print world without being able to print separations (and control those seps, ie screen angles, frequency, etc.). perhaps you may be able to wrangle ghostscript into doing that stuff, but why should you when quark, illustrator et al do it out of the box with print publishing in mind? quark certainly has its flaws, but as someone who's been working with it for over 10 years, i can say without a doubt that it's the best tool for the job (along with companions like illustrator, PS, etc.).

  160. Leaving LaTeX behind by rodentia · · Score: 1

    Here you are leaving LaTeX behind, but any commercial PS engine manages separations. My point (the expression of my wish, rather) was that the WYSIWYG DTP paradigm is dying at the hands of structured and semi-stuctured XML data. The old is new again.

    You're in the industry, you gotta recognize that print production workflows are hopeless at this point in time. Things are treated together that belong apart. The most elemental requirements for archiving or repurposing data are hostage to the friggin' page-preview tool.

    --
    illegitimii non ingravare
  161. More Quark delays by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I work for a nonprofit organization. I called up to find out the nonprofit price for Xpress 6.0.

    After getting bounced around to about 5 different operators, I finally got a straight answer:

    - They don't have a nonprofit price yet (5.0 is about half price for charitable organizations).

    - They won't have it available for another 2 months at the nonprofit rate, give or take. Could be shorter or longer.

    - They have to update the PDF application for nonprofit purchases. (You see, it takes a graphic design software company two months to update a short PDF).

    - They would be happy to fax me the application form, but it is for 5.0 not 6.0, so it is pointless.

    - I can't get on any list to be notified when it becomes available.

    I really don't want to go with Indesign, but this really tries our patience.

  162. Re: Waiting by John+Harrison · · Score: 1
    Don,

    Given the leak today of the specs of the G5, would you wait?

    later,
    John