Office 2007

Please stop me if I am mak­ing a fool of myself by over­flow­ing with gush­ing praise for this thing, but, seri­ously, the best $75 I ever spent on soft­ware. (Yes, you can get the lat­est Office Ulti­mate for $75 if you’re a stu­dent. Legit.)

The new ver­sion of Word is a thing of beauty. It just works, and makes sense, and is gen­er­ally a usabil­ity won­der. I’m sure some­one will pub­lish a study to the con­trary in the next week, but I don’t care — it is per­fectly intu­itive to a non-Office lit­er­ate user. Yes, that is myself – I’ve bat­tled with OO.org for years, and am utterly con­vinced it sucks. I have occa­sion­ally fought with MS Office prod­ucts in this time, and bat­tled slightly less, but still it’s felt like I’m doing things the slow way. Every essay I’ve writ­ten over the last eigh­teen months is stored in LyX (LaTeX) for­mat: I’ve basi­cally not used a word proces­sor for any­thing seri­ous in at least that long. And I haven’t used a Microsoft word proces­sor at home for three years (on a hor­ri­ble lap­top), and not on my pri­mary desk­top com­puter for four, or pos­si­bly five. His­tor­i­cal per­spec­tive: I started using Win­dows when I was 7, stopped when I was 15 or 16, and returned at 18 ½ — Microsoft have got good rea­son to be try­ing to bring me back into the fam­ily, because I’ve been away for a long time.

I am as upset as the next web devel­oper about the Out­look team’s brain-dead deci­sion to switch back to Word as the pri­mary rich email ren­der­ing engine, but will wax lyri­cal about the new cal­en­dar­ing fea­tures in Out­look!! For they are greatly beau­ti­ful. Observe my three cal­en­dars (Organ­ised into: Per­sonal & Work; Uni; Church) lay­ered together here:

Outlook 2007 week calendars layered

Groove makes me shrug enor­mously, it does noth­ing use­ful for me. Unless it’s like Share­point only… good. But even then, I’ve never dug that whole Intranet col­lab­o­ra­tive thang. Really, if I were going to run bloat-inducing col­lab­o­ra­tive soft­ware, I should start with Adobe’s Ver­sion Cue. But I don’t use it because… too many apps in my tray annoys me, and Fire­fox eats all my mem­ory as is (screeny from yes­ter­day… it peaked at about 1GB but I couldn’t be both­ered tak­ing another):

Firefox using the better part of 1GB of RAM

The only rea­son I still use that bloody browser is its exten­sions sup­port: Fire­bug has stolen my heart where Office 2007 hasn’t yet. Here’s its asset down­load gra­phy thingamijig:

Firebug in Net inspector action

It’s even bet­ter than Chris Pederick’s tool­bar. But oh how I’d love to switch to Opera (or even, shock, IE) full time now. Fire­fox really isn’t doing it for me with its bloat these days.

Speak­ing of bloat, Office 2007 is one 500MB down­load. It doesn’t down­load a 500MB stub and then install the rest — no, that includes Word, Out­look, Pow­er­point, Excel, Pub­lisher, … and all the other ran­dom crap I installed but will prob­a­bly never use. Fantastic.

Every­thing is pretty fast (but it emphat­i­cally encour­ages you to install Win­dows Live Desk­top, and see­ing as I’m a beta tester for other Live stuff pretty will­ingly, I fig­ured I may as well, and when you first install that index­ing makes every­thing chug) which is excel­lent — but I’m still look­ing to buy a new dual core 939 some­time soon. Graph­ics are fine because I have no inten­tion of upgrad­ing to Vista (read: need­ing DirectX 10 and a $1000 graph­ics card) in the next 18 months at least, but… well, another 2GB of RAM would go down nicely. Shame it’s still rel­a­tively expen­sive, though.

Microsoft, I wasn’t going to pirate your soft­ware because it’s not that good, but thanks for the dis­count, anyway!

CS 3 leetness

Can’t wait. Just watched this CS3 pre­view video and am gen­er­ally quite pumped. Mind you I’ve spent the day going between con­ver­sa­tions about design so that’s prob­a­bly a part of it. I’m espe­cially excited by the new selec­tion mode, but the per­spec­tive thing has got me pretty pumped, too. I actu­ally hadn’t dis­cov­ered that existed in CS2 yet, but it’s frus­trat­ing now know­ing that angle selec­tion is com­ing and I haven’t got access to it yet! Bring it on. Adobe just keep com­ing up with ways to send me broke!

# by Josh on February 26th, 2007 Tags:
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SilverStripe CMS and the difficulty of CYIADA

I stum­bled across this PHP5 CMS today (via a WSG mem­ber post) and it looks pretty good. I’m a lit­tle con­cerned about the (very)-AJAX admin side of things, but didn’t spend much time dig­ging into it so it might grace­fully degrade (maybe).

It’s almost frus­trat­ing to find such good and mature CMS prod­ucts on the mar­ket and not have any need to use them for CYIADA… I spent the last week mostly try­ing to shape fairly sim­ple data mod­els for dif­fer­ent aspects of the web­site and it’s rapidly becom­ing clear just how struc­turally com­plex multi-tiered community/community gen­er­ated con­tent sites are. At least in terms of rela­tional DB com­plex­ity, yes, this is big­ger than MySpace.

Any­way, Sil­ver­Stripe looks worth a look for sim­pler endevours.

The com­plex­ity is mostly intro­duced where users become authors, which defies tra­di­tional CMS work­flow alto­gether. It’s also far more struc­tured than Wiki sys­tems are, and far more pri­vate. Pri­vacy is being bal­anced against flex­i­bil­ity which is being bal­anced against com­mu­nity and all of these are being met with time/cost concerns.

But I like to keep telling myself I don’t really know what I’m talk­ing about and get­ting a pro­gram­mer will solve all these dilem­mas … yeah, right.

I’ve got sick of sit­ting on my hands and just want to be a web prac­ti­tioner again. I know the prod­uct inside out, it’s been planned to the hilt, stake­hold­ers are uni­ver­sally intrigued/waiting for it, and I’m being impa­tient and feel­ing gen­er­ally like charg­ing for­wards. Which is, in all prob­a­bil­ity, not the best way to be approach­ing things.

These two con­sul­tants came in a week ago and we explained the project to them and (what I heard was) they said “we want flow­charts and scope doc­u­ments”. I’ve killed a few trees in my time, but the next per­son to help me in that isn’t going to be a con­sul­tant telling me to rehash (yet again — I’ve writ­ten doc­u­ments in so many forms, web­site copy so many times, etc.) what I’ve got with­out any fur­ther input. I’m in this weird place now where wait­ing for a pro­gram­mer is nearly required for fur­ther plan­ning action, and every­one but me appears to want more plan­ning before action… mean­while, I’m writ­ing mod­els for Django and scar­ing myself with the com­plex­ity and learn­ing Adobe prod­ucts bet­ter and gen­er­ally land­ing squarely back in front-end ter­ri­tory, which is where I’ve com­fort­ably been for the last two or so years. Well, with the excep­tion of Adobe prod­ucts, which I only finally caved to last year… what­ever :P

# by Josh on February 16th, 2007 Tags: , , , , ,
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Adobe CS2

Just got home with it. 9 discs. Cost-per-disc works out cheaper than most games. Photoshop/Illustrator/InDesign/GoLive/Acrobat 8 (read that
twice, free upgrade goodness!)/Dreamweaver plus two resource discs (lots of fonty good­ness and some tem­plates I’ll prob­a­bly never use), a video train­ing thing, and a par­tridge in a pear tree.

Adobe CS2 Premium Academic Edition Asia Pacific/Australia region

The box is nearly big enough to fit a par­tridge (what­ever that is) in, too.

Adobe Soundbooth (Beta) Rawks

I down­loaded Adobe Sound­booth Beta ear­lier this week. It’s been a while since I’ve even tried using audio soft­ware, but I’m mak­ing a video and had my heart set on one par­tic­u­lar track (The Flashbulb’s Pas­sage D… you’ve prob­a­bly heard a remix of it in Dove’s Evo­lu­tion cam­paign) with a few tweaks to make it actu­ally work well. The visual aspect of this par­tic­u­lar 30-second spot is pretty mediocre/low effort, so I fig­ured that, at very least, a decent sound­track would make it mem­o­rable (it only needs to be remem­bered for a week, too! We’re run­ning it this Sun­day as a reminder that TACKLES is start­ing up again next week).

Screenshot of the lassoo tool being used in Adobe Soundbooth Beta's spectral display
This is prob­a­bly really aver­age stuff these days, but I’ve never dri­ven Pro­tools and haven’t touched audio edit­ing things with a barge pole for so many years now that, frankly, it doesn’t mat­ter whether it’s objec­tively inno­v­a­tive or not. Seems bril­liant to me.

My biggest prob­lem is that there doesn’t seem to be any way to add to an exist­ing selec­tion? That, and because I’ve been spend­ing a bit of time in graph­ic­s­land this week (so I’m a new­born Adobe junkie, oh well!), it seems like the Remove a Sound task (and effects in gen­eral) would be a per­fect can­di­date for appli­ca­tion of what­ever the audio equiv­a­lent of a mask layer is in terms of user inter­face. Non-destructive, easy to turn on/off, easy to build up in mul­ti­ple passes (because it’s really still quite lin­ear in the way you have to work).

Then again, it’s entirely prob­a­ble I’ve just com­pletely missed some way of work­ing that makes it all very sen­si­ble… but pos­si­bly not. What­ever, I’m quite con­tent to keep play­ing for a while longer… only I’d like to get this par­tic­u­lar job done (audio & video) before today is over!

# by Josh on January 24th, 2007 Tags: ,
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Adobe Production Studio: Back in Mac

I dis­cov­ered this today. It upset me.

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Jan. 4, 2007 — Adobe Sys­tems Incor­po­rated (Nasdaq:ADBE) today announced that the next ver­sion of Adobe® Pro­duc­tion Stu­dio, the inte­grated video and audio post­pro­duc­tion tool set that is part of the Cre­ative Suite fam­ily, will be avail­able for both the Mac­in­tosh and Win­dows® plat­forms. Film, video and web pro­fes­sion­als cur­rently using Adobe After Effects®, Adobe Pho­to­shop® and Adobe Illus­tra­tor® on the Mac will soon be able to har­ness the power of com­pletely new Mac­in­tosh releases of Adobe Pre­miere® Pro, Adobe Encore® DVD and Adobe Soundbooth™ — all key com­po­nents of an upcom­ing mile­stone revi­sion to Adobe Pro­duc­tion Stu­dio. The soft­ware will have its first pub­lic demon­stra­tion dur­ing the Mac­world 2007 Con­fer­ence and Exhi­bi­tion at The Moscone Cen­ter in San Fran­cisco, Jan­u­ary 9 – 12 (Booth 901). The next release of Adobe Pro­duc­tion Stu­dio is expected to ship in mid-2007.

Are they try­ing to con­vince me to buy a Mac? Ever since some­one showed me what you can do with Objec­tive C and Quartz to any video source on a Mac I’ve been wish­ing it were prac­ti­cal to buy one and use it for every­thing I wanted to, but couldn’t bring myself to con­sider FCP on account of lack of snazzy inte­gra­tion. Ah well. I’m sure some­thing else will crop up before the elusively-dated “mid-2007″ to help me reconsider…

Creative Crayola Crapola

I’m hav­ing one of those “you’re not in preschool so why does every­thing you come up with look as though it’s been designed with extra-large crayons?” days. Bad times. The stu­pid thing is I am start­ing to become really well acquainted with the GIMP’s capa­bil­i­ties (beyond just mak­ing pho­tos look less-bad) and now its inter­face is what feels lim­it­ing (espe­cially the way it han­dles lay­ers and masks ver­sus the way Pho­to­shop does). So now I’m up for a grand worth of soft­ware (that I so can’t afford) just to make myself feel bet­ter about the tools I’m using, etc. and hope­fully get more pro­duc­tive accord­ingly.
Any­one wanna donate to the buy-Josh-Creative-Suite-2 (even though 3 is about to come out) fund? It’s my birth­day tomor­row, if that helps! ;-) Hehe. (No, really, it’s my birth­day tomor­row… I’m jok­ing about the buy­ing me CS2 bit though)
Frus­trat­ingly, there are free CS3 betas to be had on the Adobe site, but only if you’re an exist­ing CS2 user. Sigh. I could use it at work, but lack of accept­able Inter­net con­nec­tiv­ity and no dual mon­i­tors is push­ing me to stay at home, instead.

Speak­ing of soft­ware, though, as soon as I buy that it’s time to finally get Pre­miere as well. So. Sick. Of. iMovie/WMM/Avid Free DV/whatever. The few times I’ve had oppor­tu­nity to use Pre­miere for a while have been fairly pleas­ant expe­ri­ences — obvi­ously it’s a lot more pow­er­ful than free crap, but that doesn’t seem to have a mas­sive usabil­ity trade-off. Which is, you know, kinda nice. Only, again, kinda expensive.

If I pay any tax this year after hav­ing claimed all this soft­ware I’ll be slightly hor­ri­fied :P

# by Josh on January 19th, 2007 Tags: , ,
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