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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?"

18 of 411 comments (clear)

  1. 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....

  2. 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"
  3. 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 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.

  4. 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

  5. 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/
  6. 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...

  7. 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,"

  8. 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.

  9. 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.)

  10. 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!

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    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". :-(

  11. 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.

  12. 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.

  13. 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?

  14. 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.
  15. 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.
  16. 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