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I bet most of you see 08jackt's projects and wonder "how does he do it?" There is an answer: Adobe Fireworks. But where can you find Fireworks along with other great programs like Photoshop, Macromedia Flash, and After Affects? Adobe Creative Suite. This pristine package gives you a multitude of programs to choose from. Now you can have wondrous visuals in your projects without much hassle! To add some more spice to it, use a tablet in conjunction with the programs. It'll be much more comfortable than a mouse (maybe, as results may vary).
Here's a list of the fine programs in this wellspring of awesomeness:
Adobe Acrobat is a software family dedicated to Adobe's Portable Document Format (PDF):
Adobe Acrobat Standard, Adobe Acrobat Professional, and Adobe Acrobat Professional Extended all allow for the creation of PDF files
Adobe Reader, a free software application which allows the reading of PDF files
Adobe After Effects is a digital motion graphics and compositing software published by Adobe Systems. It can be used in film and video post-production.
Adobe Bridge is an organizational program. Its primary purpose is to link the parts of the Creative Suite together using a format similar to the file browser found in previous versions of Adobe Photoshop.
Adobe Contribute can edit the content of a website. It allows a wide variety of people within an organization to update web pages by reducing the amount of web design skills necessary for the process.
Adobe CS Live is a set of subscription-based online services that integrates with Adobe Creative Suite software. CS Live includes the following services:
Adobe BrowserLab, a solution for cross-browser testing with ability to preview dynamic web pages and local content with multiple viewing, diagnostic, and comparison tools.
Adobe CS Review, allow users to create and share reviews online and get feedback on design projects from within Creative Suite desktop applications.
Acrobat.com, a free web application that allows users to create, store and share documents and PDF files on-line.
Adobe Story, a collaborative script development tool used to accelerate the process of creating screenplays and turning them into finished media.
SiteCatalyst NetAverages, a service that provides internet trends data for users to design online content for broad audiences or multiple screens.
Adobe Device Central's primary purpose is to integrate parts of the Creative Suite together to offer both professional and individual creative professionals, web designers, and mobile developers an easier way to preview and test Flash Lite, bitmap, web, and video content for mobile devices.
Adobe Dreamweaver is a combination code / GUI web development application.
Adobe Dynamic Link integrates After Effects with Premiere Pro and with Encore.
Adobe Encore is a software tool for authoring DVD and Blu-ray - produced by Adobe Systems and targeted at semi-professional video producers. Files are automatically transcoded to MPEG-2 or H.264/MPEG-4 AVC video and Dolby Digital audio. DVD and Blu-ray menus can be created and edited in Adobe Photoshop using special layering techniques.
Adobe Fireworks is a bitmap and vector graphics editor, aimed at web designers (with features such as: slices, the ability to add hotspots etc.).
Adobe Flash is a software family dedicated to various Adobe multimedia technologies:
Adobe Flash Professional, a multimedia authoring program used to create web applications, games, movies, and content for mobile phones and other embedded devices. It features support for vector and raster graphics, a scripting language called ActionScript and bi-directional streaming of audio and video.
Adobe Flash Catalyst, an interaction design tool that allow users to transform Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, and Fireworks artwork into interactive Adobe Flash projects without writing code.
Adobe Flash Builder, formerly Adobe Flex Builder, is an integrated development environment (IDE) built on the Eclipse platform meant for developing rich Internet applications (RIAs) and cross-platform desktop applications for the Adobe Flash platform.
Adobe Flash Player, a free software application which allows the playing of standalone Adobe Flash (SWF) multimedia files.
Adobe Illustrator is a vector graphics editor.
Adobe InDesign is a desktop publishing application.
Adobe OnLocation is a direct-to-disk recording and monitoring software.
Adobe Photoshop is a raster-graphics editor (with significant vector graphics functionality).
Adobe Premiere Pro is a real-time, timeline-based video editing software application.
Adobe Audition is a digital audio editor that provides the modern interface and seamless workflow of Adobe Soundbooth with the precision and power of Audition. Audition is replacing Soundbooth as of CS5.5.
WARNING: ACS costs $$$. It's expensive. Also, different editions of ACS have different selections of programs, as seen in the link. Earlier versions cost less, due not being in demand as high as the current version. Don't just go buying this willy-nilly.
You can also buy any of the programs of your choice separately.
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It seemed the people who used my computer before I did installed the whole shabang of Adobe.
And, Yes, Adobe Fireworks is da bomb!
You can also make animated Gifs with it
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Snowdrift wrote:
It seemed the people who used my computer before I did installed the whole shabang of Adobe.
And, Yes, Adobe Fireworks is da bomb!
You can also make animated Gifs with it
Hope this helps. :DDDDDDDDD
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Snowdrift wrote:
It seemed the people who used my computer before I did installed the whole shabang of Adobe.
And, Yes, Adobe Fireworks is da bomb!
You can also make animated Gifs with it
I like Flash more, for animated GIF's.
IK it's supposed to be a programming tool, but its interface is much easier for scenes and animations!
Fireworks is better for stills -- I make all of my banners and logos in it. They end up really well!
[/post coming from a CS4 holder]
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Bump
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LS97 wrote:
Snowdrift wrote:
It seemed the people who used my computer before I did installed the whole shabang of Adobe.
And, Yes, Adobe Fireworks is da bomb!
You can also make animated Gifs with itI like Flash more, for animated GIF's.
IK it's supposed to be a programming tool, but its interface is much easier for scenes and animations!
Fireworks is better for stills -- I make all of my banners and logos in it. They end up really well!
[/post coming from a CS4 holder]
Did you personally buy it with your own money?
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ProgrammingFreak wrote:
LS97 wrote:
Snowdrift wrote:
It seemed the people who used my computer before I did installed the whole shabang of Adobe.
And, Yes, Adobe Fireworks is da bomb!
You can also make animated Gifs with itI like Flash more, for animated GIF's.
IK it's supposed to be a programming tool, but its interface is much easier for scenes and animations!
Fireworks is better for stills -- I make all of my banners and logos in it. They end up really well!
[/post coming from a CS4 holder]Did you personally buy it with your own money?
Yeah
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LS97 wrote:
ProgrammingFreak wrote:
LS97 wrote:
I like Flash more, for animated GIF's.
IK it's supposed to be a programming tool, but its interface is much easier for scenes and animations!
Fireworks is better for stills -- I make all of my banners and logos in it. They end up really well!
[/post coming from a CS4 holder]Did you personally buy it with your own money?
Yeah
Wow. Thats a lot of cash.
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ProgrammingFreak wrote:
LS97 wrote:
ProgrammingFreak wrote:
Did you personally buy it with your own money?Yeah
Wow. Thats a lot of cash.
It is pretty darn expensive. Good thing these things don't expire, cause I'm not buying any other versions!
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Yep, Adobe has some great products...but they do cost big money. Maybe, in the interests of a turning this into something other than an Adobe advertisement, we could hear from other people about their favorite products, free or otherwise?
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Sorry, i looked at the title and almost immediately reported it as spam. I didn't, but maybe you should be more careful with topic titles!
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assuming you're talking about the editor and not the player, $699
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Fireworks < Gimp
Photoshop < Gimp
Illustrator < Inkscape
Premiere/onlocation ≈ iMovie
Dreamweaver <<< Hand coding with text editor with syntax highlighting + files and folders + knowhow.
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jji7skyline wrote:
Fireworks < Gimp
Photoshop < Gimp
Illustrator < Inkscape
Premiere/onlocation ≈ iMovie
Dreamweaver <<< Hand coding with text editor with syntax highlighting + files and folders + knowhow.
+1000002
Oh, and I will stick to my theory that 08jackt is a girl.
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jji7skyline wrote:
Fireworks < Gimp
Photoshop < Gimp
Illustrator < Inkscape
Premiere/onlocation ≈ iMovie
Dreamweaver <<< Hand coding with text editor with syntax highlighting + files and folders + knowhow.
I find iMovie really fiddly, and it doesn't let you layer video tracks (which makes aligning clips much more difficult, even if you only want a single layer in the end). Premiere compares much better with something like Final Cut Pro, which I used to edit the Lego Portal stop motion I did — but FCP's really expensive, too. :P <pssst> it has a 30 day free trial... </pssst>
I'll agree with you on that last point. I've tried a few "web editors", like Coda or Espresso (I think?), but I always end up preferring a plain text editor... :)
Last edited by blob8108 (2012-10-06 02:58:56)
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jji7skyline wrote:
Fireworks < Gimp
Photoshop < Gimp
Illustrator < Inkscape
Premiere/onlocation ≈ iMovie
Dreamweaver <<< Hand coding with text editor with syntax highlighting + files and folders + knowhow.
Yes.
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I find it very amusing when I see one of these topics, read it, and then realize that I had already posted here over a year before.
Skyline, I agree with most of the things you said, but there is one or two that I don't. I don't really think that GIMP is really a replacement/equality to Fireworks. I've never used it, but from what I've heard and read, it's more of an alternative for Photoshop (which you said). But Photoshop, as well as GIMP, is a more raster based program while Fireworks is vector.
I'm not sure what would be a good alternative for Fireworks though, since I've never used it.
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ProgrammingFreak wrote:
I find it very amusing when I see one of these topics, read it, and then realize that I had already posted here over a year before.
Skyline, I agree with most of the things you said, but there is one or two that I don't. I don't really think that GIMP is really a replacement/equality to Fireworks. I've never used it, but from what I've heard and read, it's more of an alternative for Photoshop (which you said). But Photoshop, as well as GIMP, is a more raster based program while Fireworks is vector.
I'm not sure what would be a good alternative for Fireworks though, since I've never used it.
Gimp is more than enough for fireworks. It has great image authoring tools.
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