Sunday 5 September 2010

Adobe Creative Suite

I have always wanted to use the numeric keypad in ADOBE InDesign, like you can in ADOBE Illustrator and ADOBE Photoshop and many other programs including ADOBE programs.


Ctrl+1 = Actual size

Ctrl+0 = Fit in window


Doesn't work in InDesign, never has. Even Quark can do that. What's the matter with Adobe? They have been developing this for almost 10 years.


Only thing that works using the numeric keypad is:

Ctrl+ (+) = bigger size

Ctrl+ (–) = smaller size


I thought the idea was to make all function keys and pallets the same across what they laughingly call "Creative Suite"


They should ditch a few of the useless elements like "Bridge" and concentrate on making the 3 main programs a seamless suite.


Blog, over and out.

Wednesday 14 April 2010

Adobe CS5 announced

Adobe CS5 is out in May. £746.00 just to upgrade the standard version. Our "annual rental fee" has gone up from £450 last year to £750 this year. "Design Premium" is £650 so they are trying to hook me into moving up to the more expensive version by making the Premium upgrade cheaper than the Standard upgrade. Do they learn this sneaky, crafty accounting/marketing process from the Drug Barons then?

One thing that has always hacked me off is that they are NOT all integrated as they claim.
All Adobe software allows you to scale the page Ctrl plus +/- up or down, or Ctrl+1 = actual size.
Except InDesign! Why does InDesign not let you use the numeric keypad?
Photoshop does it, Illustrator has done it for 20 years and so has QuarkXPress.

Bet they still havn't fixed it. Bet they just added more useless bells and whistles.

Fast as you get to learn your way around the software and start to produce efficient, and quick production...
...they shift everything around, hide things and sell it to you again for £750 quid. Then production slows while you get to grips with where they have hidden tools or completely re-named old items to make them appear new.

And woe betide you if you don't pay up. You won't get support, and you won't be able to open any newer files.
Hooked. Like a heroin addict.

We should be protected from this sort of extortion. No other industry does it. Maybe there should be a new quango set up called "OffSoft" to regulate?

Imagine buying a car and finding after 12 months it will no longer run on petrol and you have to pay £750 for a conversion.
There would be public outcry! Be on the Sky "Breaking News" banner. Then when the car is 2 years old they make the ignition key redundant and charge you another £750 for a new digital key option.

Why do we stand for this? Speak up people!

W :-)))

Saturday 6 March 2010

5,000 years ago in Ireland



There's a place in Ireland called "Newgrange". A tomb complex in County Meath, built around 3100BC around the time of the Egyptian empire! It's an impressive construction and it's open to the public. And it's over 5,000 years old, making it older than Stonehenge and older than the Great Pyramid at Giza.

Fooo Kmee that's ancient!



Saint Brendan (or St Brandan) (484–577)

Irish abbot and traveller. Born in Tralee, now in County Kerry, he is traditionally regarded as the founder of the monastery of Clonfert in County Galway (561), as well as other monasteries in Ireland and Scotland. The 8th-century Irish epic Voyage of St Brendan recounts his legendary journey across the Atlantic to a ‘land of saints’. His feast day is 16 May. St Brendan is believed to have studied under the abbess St Ita in Limerick and abbot St Jarlath in Tuam. His first appointment as abbot was at Ardfert.

The location of the land to which St Brendan is supposed to have voyaged is unclear. Some authorities place it far to the north (the Hebrides, the Northern Isles, or even Iceland), while others have speculated that it may have been the Canary Islands. Some ancient maps show ‘St Brendan's country’ lying west of the Cape Verde Islands.

I have read several translated accounts of his journeys, suffering great hardships and surviving on faith, fishing, even eating the seagulls that went after his fish! These boats carried up to 60 people at a time. Lots of material on the internet if you are interested. I read that he got as far as Newfoundland and discovered ancient Nordic burial sites which possibly pre date Christ.

See - The ancients were just as intelligent and with fewer resources at their hands. Proves that we are not as smart as we think we are with our technology!

:-)


Wednesday 9 December 2009

What are iTunes doing?

An update on the earlier moan about iTunes pricing...
Today is worse folks. I went into iTunes Store this morning. Not 79p but 99p a track at iTunes store. Check it out. Most of the top songs have gone up another 20p. (WAS 99c in the USA = 59p) but today it's also gone up to $1.29 a track - at today's rate that's 79p folks (not the 99p we Brits pay). 

The Brits are almost paying 20 percent more for the same downloads. Face it, we are losers. We get shafted on petrol prices, music, tobacco, booze, car pricing, everything is begga bucks in the UK compared to many countries. Who do we think we are? Switzerland? Yeah we have the overheads but not the standards. We just lie down and take it. Suckers. Someone, somewhere is making a mint out of us. The Americans wouldn't take it. Why do we?    _| :-)   <--- my attempt at "loser".

Friday 4 December 2009

Music industry shooting themselves in the foot.

In iTunes, hidden at the very bottom right there's a union jack flag. Click on it and you can choose your country. I chose USA hee hee. iTunes USA charge 99c per music track. Converted at today's rate that's 59p a track. They charge us 79p for the same track. Uh? What's the extra 20p (or 34 percent) for??? Because we are stupid and don't complain like the American public? No wonder they are talking about the demise of the CD. I remember in the late 1980's I bought CDs in LA and they were about £5 each whilst in the UK at the time they were £13.99.

Now 20 years later they are saving the manufacturing and distribution costs of CD's by placing them on-line for us to download. A huge saving for them, but not much of an incentive for us. We are told we can keep one back-up copy (at our own expense) No colour booklets unless we print them out (at our own expense). And they are still charging £8 for an album that has cost them hardly anything to market. May they all suffer from free downloads. Theivin b'stas are whingeing that they are not making any money due to free download sites. They would love to shut them down so they can greedily grab the entire global market for themseves.

It's not as though the artists get much out of the deal themselves either, it's the fat cats that run the entire music machinery that drive their rollers etc... moan moan 'kin moan. :-0 x

Saturday 12 September 2009

Flat screen monitors

Saw a preview of an exhibition in Germany showing the new LED (not LCD) flat screen monitors on the market. For Computers, laptops and televisions. Some of these screens are only 3mm thick. (Yes three millimetres!) Foo Kmee. Why? Because they can? I am sure they will find many uses eventually but its just a very attractive, must-have gimmick. Like the iPhone was... but I now have one...  and I would never, ever give it back. I look at my wife's Nokia and it reminds me of the 1980's MS DOS operating system. It's so... computery in it's logic. 
I remember getting an iPod MP3 player, soon after there were dozens of clones on the market. Even the giant Sony had to clone it. None of them were a substitute for the real thing. They are products for people who cannot afford a real iPod. Although I think iTunes is a great store – it's far too expensive at 79p a track ! C'mon Apple. You're way ahead! Downloads should be 50p a track. Also Apple - we need a 40 inch touch screen monitor to do our graphics on. Death to the mouse and keyboard!

Apple Mac OS - Snow Leopard

Despite some bad reviews and rumours I am quietly optimistic about Apple's new operating system: Snow Leopard.
I upgraded the G5pro and the MacBook to Snow Leopard (£25 quid upgrade for up to 5 computers). Still not found fault with Snow Leopard, apart from it not letting me use my own Helvetica Neue. It says it has its own and needs it for the system fonts.
So I let it, and it seems to work OK although if I open an old file using Helvetica Neue it says the fonts are missing. I just have to go through the routine of replacing Helvetica Neue with Helvetica Neue.

UPDATE >> It does not recognise drivers to scanner or printers, except an old HP LaserJet machine which is the only one that works. I downloaded all the latest drivers, also checked the Snow Leopard Install disk. Then gave up and attached the scanner to another G5 with regular Leopard installed. Perfect. So don't be hasty buying it folks until someone sorts the driver disaster out.(Bo-ring). 
Other than that it has lots of cool new features.