Features:
- Create professional-quality publications
- Build from scratch or choose from hundreds of templates
- Achieve a uniform look with master frames to hold text
and graphics
- Professional typesetting with kerning and tracking
Includes thousands of clip art photos and illustrations
Product Description
Adobe may have the lock on professional graphics production
with Photoshop, but it has long been engaged in a drawn-out
battle with Quark for the hearts and wallets of the desktop
publishing crowd. PageMaker 7.0, Adobe's latest effort in
the desktop publishing arena, won't set it ahead of QuarkXPress
4.1, but it does have plenty of appeal for small businesses
and other audiences that have minor publishing needs.
PageMaker 7.0's user guide measures in at more than 400 pages,
and it thoughtfully explains every aspect of the vast and
complex program. A wide range of impressive-looking templates,
which cover just about every type of document imaginable (including
business cards, labels, newsletters, ads, posters, and more),
makes PageMaker a little more accessible to users unfamiliar
with its functionality. The templates are divided into various
levels of complexity, with the lowest level containing helpful
annotations for novice users.
While its improvements over version 6.5 are minimal, PageMaker
7.0 makes a few worthy strides to justify its sparkly new
version number. Among the most welcome is a surprisingly intuitive
data merge feature, which allows users to configure target
areas in their publications and import respective fields from
a spreadsheet or database. Unfortunately, it only recognizes
comma-delineated CSV or TXT files; it doesn't import data
directly from common file formats created by Microsoft Excel
or Lotus 1-2-3.
Ironically, another area of improvement in PageMaker 7.0
is compatibility with other programs. It easily imports and
handles layered image files from Illustrator and Photoshop
5.0 and 6.0, and features input converters for files created
in QuarkXPress and Microsoft Publisher. PageMaker's PDF export
capabilities have been enhanced both in the main program and
with the included Acrobat Distiller applet, allowing users
to configure security and embedded tag options.
Even with its plethora of templates, PageMaker 7.0 isn't
by any means an entry-level application. Nonprofessional users
who have never used a high-caliber desktop publishing program
should probably consider a simpler package such as Microsoft
Publisher. While hardened, professional magazine designers
tend to prefer QuarkXPress, Adobe PageMaker 7.0 is nonetheless
a complex and powerful tool that packs a serious learning
curve.
PageMaker 7.0 is perfect for small businesses that can't
afford to hire out designers for promotional materials, or
for companies that have the need to create professional-looking
PDF files. Owners of PageMaker 6.5 might not feel compelled
to upgrade, but companies and creative folks newly in the
market for a muscular desktop publishing tool will be well
served by PageMaker 7.0. --Joel Durham Jr.
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