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Adobe InDesign CS

By Daniel Drew Turner, ZDNet US
January 19, 2004
URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/software/graphics/soa/Adobe-InDesign-CS/0,139023432,120282783,00.htm


InDesign CSEven as QuarkXPress implodes, InDesign CS gains features and capabilities that make it the layout application of choice.

InDesign has gained a small core of avid users among desktop publishers, but it has taken years for Adobe to build a QuarkXPress killer. Finally, the company has done it with InDesign CS (a member of Adobe's new Creative Suite), which includes new tools and improved performance that make it worth the switch. But InDesign CS isn't without its problems. For one, most publications and presses have decades of legacy files and templates that aren't transparently compatible with InDesign CS (to be fair, QuarkXPress 6.0 doesn't handle old-version documents very well, either). Still, InDesign CS's better work-flow integration and superior type, layout and editing features are enough to kick QuarkXPress into touch.

The youngest of Adobe's Creative Suite, InDesign CS looks like its siblings (Illustrator, GoLive and Photoshop), but it takes some user interface clues from QuarkXPress and adds a few unique twists. The new interface saves space and reduces on-screen clutter, and will be particularly useful for those who use the program day in and day out.

InDesign CS offers a plethora of palettes for everything from type settings to output previews. The interface can get busy when you're working on two-page layouts, but floating palettes are collapsible. Drag a palette to the left or right side of the screen, and it docks. When palettes are combined into a palette group, you can grab the title bar and move the whole group.

InDesign CS also allows you to save work spaces -- collections of window settings and palette arrangements -- as individual files to use with future projects. These files can then be copied to other computers for other InDesign CS users.

The new Control palette will look familiar to QuarkXPress users, but Adobe adds a noticeable improvement: the context-sensitive palette displays vital information and settings for selected items. It helps you perform common tasks -- such as formatting text, resizing objects, deciding placement and modifying tables -- all from one central location. In fact, the Control palette is all you need for many projects.

And in addition to an option for QuarkXPress-style keyboard shortcuts, InDesign CS offers a Display Performance option, which can be set to Optimized, Typical or High-Quality Display. Optimized is the quickest, displaying a raster or vector image as a grey box, while High-Quality shows all images in their high-resolution version.

InDesign CS delivers some major new features (but fewer than Photoshop CS), such as nested styles and the Info palette, along with many refinements to existing ones to make it a worthy upgrade.

InDesign CS, like all of the Creative Suite programs, comes with Adobe´s Version Cue file-version manager. This allows you to search, track and share your data by saving all files in a single work space and making them available to everyone assigned to the project. Although Version Cue may not replace custom or entrenched management solutions in professional design companies, it's a competent option that comes only at the cost of extra RAM.

Nested styles enable designers to set and apply a character style nested within paragraph styles. For example, you can define the first character of a paragraph as a dingbat, the next three lines in bold, and so on. This promises to speed content construction significantly. Plus, in conjunction with InDesign CS's XML support, you can map XML styles to character styles, better preserving style content across media.

In previous versions of InDesign, editing placed text was a pain. Now, simply right-clicking (or control-clicking) the text will call up the Story Editor. The Story Editor isn't a full-featured text editor -- there are no spell-checking, outlining or table capabilities -- but it does allow live editing of content and styles.

Also new to InDesign CS are flattening and separation previews; the new Info palette that lets you see text and image data, such as image resolution and word count; support for OpenType, PDF-X and Layered PDF; in-place image editing via Photoshop; and new Pathfinder, Eyedropper and Measure tools.

But InDesign CS isn't perfect. This version breaks plug-ins for previous versions and can't save files for use with InDesign 2.0 or earlier. You can open documents built by InDesign CS from QuarkXPress versions 3.3 to 4.x with some text-flow issues, but you can't save InDesign files to QuarkXPress.

We tested InDesign CS on a 700MHz iBook and a dual-2GHz Power Mac G5. On the iBook, InDesign CS was usable, but opening complex pages took time. On the dual-2GHz Power Mac, InDesign CS didn't stutter no matter what we threw at it.

Technical support is sufficient, and information is plentiful. However, when looking at your various options, check the online user-to-user forums before picking up the phone. They are monitored by competent support staff and offer a good track record, but most importantly, they're quick and free. Adobe also offers free technical support for InDesign CS, although you will have to pay for any call charges.

InDesign CS
Company: Adobe
Price: AU$1,599, AU$349 Upgrade
Distributor: Selected resellers
Phone: (02) 9778 4100

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