GoLive CS is a solid Web-site creation option for designers, but only as part of the Creative Suite package from Adobe.For years, Adobe´s GoLive has been locked in a tough fight against Macromedia's Dreamweaver, and although GoLive CS offers many new Web-site creation features, this latest version feels like the least revised of the Adobe Creative Suite family. If you currently work extensively in Illustrator and Photoshop, GoLive CS's ability to import Photoshop, Illustrator and PDF files with layers intact will simplify your life. And GoLive CS's Smart Objects, which allow you to prepare and update objects in your preferred application, integrate well across the entire suite. But outside the Creative Suite environment, GoLive CS isn't yet compelling enough for you to forsake Dreamweaver in its favour.
If you're familiar with basic software installation options, GoLive CS is a relatively painless operation. Unlike Photoshop CS, GoLive CS does not require that you activate it within a month of installation.
GoLive began life as a product called GoLive CyberStudio from a German company called GoLive. Years after Adobe purchased it and renamed it GoLive, much -- perhaps too much -- of the original application remains. In fact, of all the Creative Suite applications, the GoLive CS interface looks the least Adobe-like. There are still the tiny, eye-straining, original GoLive icons, the Pick Whip (the rubber-band-like thing that enables linking to pages by dragging an animated line), and the near-pathological categorising of every possible element of a Web page and the tidy layout grid. That said, GoLive CS should be familiar to anyone who's used Photoshop CS, Illustrator CS or InDesign CS. GoLive CS runs on Windows 2000 Service Pack 3 or later or Macintosh OS X.
GoLive CS offers better design tools and multimedia access, as well as better integration with other Adobe applications within the Creative Suite environment.
Prime among GoLive CS's new features is a Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) editor, which supports both the Level 1 and Level 2 W3C standards. As browsers evolve and support standards change, design tools like this will become more vital. The inclusion of BBEdit-like features such as a tag editor, coloured syntax, and code completion are also nice. GoLive CS can open and edit most QuickTime files -- even MPEG-4 movies -- without leaving the application. Again, Adobe hasn't made any revolutionary changes here, but this inclusion will speed your work flow.
We also like GoLive CS's greater integration with other Adobe applications. For example, InDesign CS's new Package For GoLive feature collects and prepares all graphic and text assets for GoLive and, where necessary, will import only updated assets. In our various tests, Package For GoLive worked well, although some text layouts still needed manual tweaking. Through features such as Smart Objects (proxies of source files owned by other applications), you can manipulate an item without altering its source file. There's also improved PDF support and the ability to preserve layers in imported Photoshop files, but similar or parallel functionalities currently exist in Macromedia's Dreamweaver universe.
Perhaps the biggest enhancement to GoLive CS is the inclusion of Version Cue, Adobe's suite management system. You can now use Version Cue to set password-protected work spaces and check in and out projects and artwork within GoLive or any of the other Creative Suite applications. Although we were unable to test it in a true production environment, Version Cue's ability to save versions of a file and move back and forth between them while using a single filename promises to be useful. Also, you can use Version Cue to append comments to files. However, all this comes at a performance cost: enabling Version Cue requires 128MB of RAM.
Of all the Creative Suite applications we reviewed, GoLive CS was the least happy on our 700MHz iBook. Previewing pages -- especially when previewing them as PDFs -- produced long waits. Working with QuickTime movies and Version Cue also caused delays longer than a busy professional could stand. To be fair, Dreamweaver also faced performance problems on the same hardware.
Adobe offers free technical support for GoLive CS, although you will have to pay for any call charges. However, there's free online help available for GoLive users. In addition to the Adobe Studio site, which delivers tips, tutorials and tools, Adobe's user-to-user forums are monitored by competent support staff and offer a good track record. Adobe's knowledge base has rarely disappointed us.
GoLive CS
Company: Adobe
Price: AU$959, AU$349 upgrade
Distributor: Selected resellers
Phone: (02) 9778 4100



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GoLive CS 7.01 is the most unstable application on my system (100% serious). It crashs when doing very basic things like handling text and using the built in FTP. It crashes all the time. I must admit that version 7.01 is a little more stable than GoLive CS 7.0, but this kind of stablity does not cut it. I had over five GoLive CS 7.01 crashes yesterday (once is too much). GoLive CS 7.01 does nothing for me but cause me rework (constantly) and paranoia of the next impending crash (When will it happen? I promise it will crash). For now I would WARN anyone to steer clear of GoLive CS and wait and see if Adobe is even able to fix this broken or buggy application. The GoLive CS 7.01 code is seems bad. GoLive CS 7.0 code must be even worse.