David Milisock's Blog
https://au.marketo.com/
Never noticed this until a read today.
Marketo is more than just software - when you use it, you get a playbook for digital marketing success.
Not that I'm suggesting Corel should do this. Maybe worth finding a partner that's a "king" in this area.
Alternatives — Always looking for better than Adobe. financesonline.com/.../
I agree, I only use Acrobat Pro 9 anymore and that's because of the Adobe conforming PDF driver and Distiller. I us no Adobe graphics applications any longer and that has been for several years.
David, Adobe may not have anything to offer to you compared to CorelDRAW. The way it looks to me CorelDRAW is in a struggle to remain relevant. Nearly all the functional advantages Corel has had over Illustrator have disappeared. Corel had graphic design industry niches such as the sign industry mostly to themselves (unless you count sign industry specific design applications such as Flexi, GerberOmega, SignLab, etc as competitors). Adobe has been slowly, steadily chipping away at Corel's foothold at the high end. And then there are "affordable" upstarts now chipping away at the low end.
Here's the thing I find really troubling: Corel has done a terrible job maintaining CorelDRAW over its past couple or so versions. Version 2020 is near the end up its product cycle. In the space of a year CDR 2020 received just one point release update and one hot fix. That's it. Various bugs remain. I've had to keep older versions of CorelDRAW running alongside on both my work desktop and notebook at home to work around the bugs present in CDR 2020. By comparison Illustrator 24 received 3 serious point release updates and more than a dozen smaller bug fix updates. Illustrator 25 has already received a couple minor updates since being introduced in late October (including one update this morning).
The folks running Corel appear to think they're equal in stature to Adobe in the graphics industry. If they really want to be seen in that manner they have to put a lot more development muscle behind CorelDRAW. Right now CorelDRAW is languishing from neglect. Compound that with the new pricing model ($249 per year subscription or $499 full + $149 annually for "upgrade protection"). I think it's a recipe for ruin.
IMHO, CorelDRAW needs to go back to a 2 year product cycle. They're just not delivering the goods on an annual basis, and certainly not for these prices -which they need to re-visit. I think they need to bring back normal perpetual license upgrades. I think they run a high risk of losing customers. Some may go it with Adobe exclusively. Some may look for alternatives to both Corel and Adobe. Many CorelDRAW users are simply staying put with old versions. I may do that if I see my "upgrade protection" price boosted from $99 to $149 when CorelDRAW 2021 is released.
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In regards to LED-based variable message signs, my company does quite well selling them. We do get a decent mark-up on them (there's no way we're selling them at cost). We primarily sell Daktronics displays. They cost a bit more on the front end, but they look better and hold up a lot better. We know how to service the displays, which is extremely important. If a sign company doesn't have anyone on staff who can replace driver boards, controllers, etc they should not try selling that kind of product in the first place.
Many city/town governments have drafted serious restrictions or outright bans on LED variable message signs. They still remain legal in many other places. But the much bigger problem is the growing number of sign codes that put severe restrictions on all kinds of signs. I think it's a civic backlash to the "anything goes" junky attitude so many businesses and sign companies have had with on-premise signs. There's a lot of blatantly unprofessional eye-sore garbage getting erected in too many places. Squeezed and stretched default Arial is all over the place. And then there's a lot of sign structures that are just poorly maintained (missing faces, dead lamps, rusting parts, etc). That adds to blight.
A lot of cities and towns have had it past their eyeballs with that nonsense. Then they look to high income enclaves where signs are hardly visible at all. The only ones you see are tombstone sized monuments covered up with bushes or modest channel letter signs on a building. The town fathers in the places struggling with blight see how nice the high income areas look and want to copy it. The problem is on-premise signs do have a vital, necessary function for local businesses. And if they cannot advertise using that medium it just makes it easier for customers to stay home and order from competitors online.
I agree, I used to have 40 or more users with my architectural clients, now I have zero. Every complaint my clients had went totally unaddressed. The list is long but stability, font management, customizations causing crashes, no forward movement in Photo-PAINT. The list goes on for miles.
X8 font management was so awful it was unusable in a networked environment. CorelDRAW users that worked for them were so bad with customizing their work spaces and corrupting their machines that the IT staff considered Draw no longer viable. I ask for years for an administrative lock, nothing was ever done.
Graphics is very diverse, many types of files can be done with low and no cost applications. That is tough for Adobe and Corel. However it's like Corel isn't even trying.
I read users post the application needs that new wow feature but that's crap. There is no wow feature. There are a set of needs that make a wow!
State of the art font support that work, web bases work flow that actually works, interfacing with other applications that works. Features that have been tested and work, to start with. Core technology that works is not enough any longer.
I have to use the noise reduction features of AftetShot Pro, PaintShop Pro and Photo-PAINT in my image editing. That's not unusual as Photoshop lacks some of these too, however Photo-PAINT just got it's decade old features moved from 8 bit to16 bit while the hobby program had more advanced features,
I'm teetering between thinking that Corel management just does not care and that Corel management just doesn't know! The world is so stupid I leaning toward that Corel just does no know.
In my area they have regulated signs to the point where a $300 sign can require a $500 engineer drawing along with $150 permitting fee!
Some of the regulatory stuff involving signs drives me completely bat-$#!+ crazy at times. It does nothing but waste time and effort to prove to some government bean counter that you know what you are doing in your job. It's really insulting to be blunt about it. I have 40+ years of real art and design experience, a 4 year degree from one of the nation's best art schools and over 25 years of experience doing sign work. I think it's pretty clear I am competent (and actually pretty great) in the work I do. But I have to prove my worth via the red tape again and again.
Some of it isn't so difficult, thankfully. I have a number of "section detail" cross section drawings I adjust and re-use for electrical plans. I'm always on the lookout to come up with new ways how to work around the red tape nonsense. But it is a pain when you have to reproduce scale drawings of a building elevation, complete with all kinds of dimensional call-out labels, just in order to get an installation permit. We're talking more than just Photoshopping an image of the sign onto a photo of the building.
One thing I cannot control is the conduct of others doing bad design work in this same industry. Those guys and their cheapskate bosses are going to ruin the whole endeavor for all of us. They're only out to make a fast buck. I'm wanting to maintain a business model for decades and leave something behind for others coming up into our industry. But we won't have any sign industry to speak of if sign designers refuse to understand the civic responsibility they must observe in their work. A great looking, great quality sign can turn into a town landmark. A poorly designed sign is an eye-sore and contributes to blight. Sign designers, sign business owners and the businesses themselves really need to operate from a perspective of: am I being part of the problem or part of the solution? They can add to the commercial landscape in a positive way or crap on it in a negative way.
I feel like the development team behind CorelDRAW has its hands tied in multiple ways. There's no doubt they've had to endure nonsense coming from down on high via the private equity company bosses who own Corel. First it was Vector Capital and now it is KKR. If I had to guess the development team for CorelDRAW is getting a constant ration of grief and anger from the bosses higher above for how they're supposedly failing. But the CorelDRAW developers are clearly not provided the resources and personnel needed to keep up with or (God forbid) surpass Adobe. It is perfectly clearly the Corel team is suffering given the lack of updates they've been able to provide over the past couple or so years via flawed versions of CorelDRAW. I feel like CDR 2018 was the last reasonably stable version of CorelDRAW. If the CorelDRAW development team was other than beleaguered and disillusioned I would be surprised.
Meanwhile the field of competitors are not sitting on their hands. Adobe clearly considers Illustrator a vital part of its arsenal and is actively working to improve it. The Illustrator beta program is no joke. The Adobe team actually listens to suggestions from beta users. I feel like I can take credit for a couple positive changes that happened in the past year, a couple changes of which removed key advantages CorelDRAW held over Illustrator. Adobe is working in a hotly competitive environment. The vector draw program angle is actually a lesser concern. I think Adobe is operating far more in an damage control angle on the video production end. After Effects is still very much a titan application for motion graphics. But DaVinci Resolve has really been gnawing hard on Adobe's heels and threatening to totally overtake them. DaVinci Resolve doesn't require some $54 per month revolving fee to use. DaVinci Resolve has a free, open source version. And then they have a full tilt deluxe version that costs $300. The graphics departments in our local university and vo-tech lean hard into Adobe. But I've told them they really need to be taking a hard look at DaVinci Resolve. The folks at Blackmagic Design really do know what they're doing. Unlike Corel, I think Adobe is realistic about the challenges it faces and they're trying hard to step up their game. The Premiere Pro NLE app was deficient in a number of areas and Adobe has been trying to fix it. Adobe has been adding new features in response to new video card chip sets, particularly those from AMD. While Adobe might be the "big bad monopoly" their executives seem to be acting as if they know very well they have vulnerabilities.
Bobby Henderson said:DaVinci Resolve
That's great software and it's FREE! You only pay when you go to the next level then you get video noise reduction, multiple GPUs, 3D etc.
It's the perfect example of a company that knows how to build marketshare and its AUSTRALIAN! Grant started that here developing boxes to connect devices that had no connection. Now he's making some of the best cameras in the world, I think they are the only 16 bit video cameras in their price range (if at all) and they developed their own codex for their cameras.
Damn pity Grant didn't buy Corel!
Joe Christina did a series called (if memory serves) Cutting the Cord Life Without Adobe. He thought well of PaintShop Pro. He uses DaVinci Resolve and Linus Tech did a review of DaVinci. Both IT tech guys and VLOG people. Linus Tech loved DaVinci but being a larger company than Joe Christina and using dedicated stations for processing his cost analysis still favored Adobe due to performance issues with DaVinci. Joe Christina also found issues with performance but his work load allowed him to plow through. He alluded to some issues still being his Ryzen system.
DaVinci (the bought version) is ok software however for a great deal more money Adobe is not a great deal better.
I've logged many hours researching hardware and software, clearly the current generation of file creators (I won't call them professional just because someone pays them) clearly has their head up their collective butts.
Many issues are caused by unintelligent behaviors and poor technical choices, regardless of what software you use. They seem to not understand that time is money.
If you're creating files learn what you're doing, if you think that from Adobe or Corel you're going to create a 6 spot color job using complex fills and transparencies and it's going to work. GOOD LUCK! It can be done because both software platforms are capable but it takes a real professional with a comprehensive understanding of output technology.
If you use a wireless network you better have a very light work load otherwise what the hell are you thinking?
The same for using a laptop but I would add that to be useful in a medium work environment with a laptop you had better spend and I mean SPEND REAL money on that laptop. The instant you have multiple transparencies and complex fills watch out.
Using AMD, all the high end tech people I've watched and emailed with eventually make it work but you had better really be a high end tech person. Time involved to work out the issues ranged from a few weeks to a few months. Then again you might get lucky and get one that works, MAYBE!
Xeon can be useful but again you better be a real tech person and SPEND REAL money. I'll add that my architectural clients are moving away from them, as i9 performance on 3D renderings are more cost effective.
CorelDRAW for those of us who create and output our files and happen to have a version previous to 2019 and also have 2020 installed can create and output state of the art files. With that said life with CorelDRAW is a great deal better with real power. Desktops, Intel i7 or higher, 32 GB of RAM, true NVidia graphics cards with 6GB of RAM and a quality SSD.
Now if Corel can get their corporate heads out of their butts.