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Mac OS X  |  Design / Graphics  |  Publishing  |  iStudio Publisher

iStudio Publisher

iStudio Publisher - 1.0.2

Easy-to-use desktop publishing and design app.

All Time: (2.0)
Version 1.0.2: (1.0)
Selected Version: 1.0.2
Release Date: 2009-01-11
License: Shareware
Downloads (version 1.0.2): 173
Downloads (all versions): 1,742
Price: $49.99

Information Related to Version:

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Product Description:

iStudio Publisher is an easy to use desktop publishing and design application which lets users draw shapes, run text inside and around the shapes and place images within them at the same time. The software includes a shape library of commonly used items. Other features include dynamic text wrapping, linking between shapes, zoom to 5000 percent, and live formatting during drag.

Operating System Requirements:

This product is designed to run on the following operating systems:

  • Mac OS X 10.5 Intel
  • Mac OS X 10.5 PPC
  • Mac OS X 10.4 Intel
  • Mac OS X 10.4 PPC

Additional Requirements:

  • 800 MHz G4 processor or faster

Screenshots:

iStudio Publisher

Download Links:

Download Links:

Your Installed Versions:


 

Feedback Summary:

Version 1.0.2:
Overall Rating: (1.0) Features: (1.0) Support: (1.0)
Ease of Use: (1.0) Quality / Stability: (1.0) Price: (1.0)
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iStudio Publisher ReviewReview at Macworld - Version: 1.0.3, 3/9/2009 08:33AM PST

JayNelsonDotMac
Macworld published my review of version 1.0.4 here:

<http://www.macworld.com/article/139236/2009/03/istudiopub104.html>

I gave it 3.5 out of 5 stars, with hope for future promised feature updates.
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iStudio Publisher ReviewHoly crap! - Version: 1.0.4, 2/20/2009 07:43PM PST

(0 of 1 users found this comment useful)

spectrumo
To utter 'holy crap' in regards to istudio publisher is to literally bestow the crown of divine poo onto it.
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iStudio Publisher ReviewPoor Pudding - Version: 1.0.2, 1/25/2009 12:40AM PST

(1 of 2 users found this comment useful)

trijos

To begin with, the process involved with simply getting to the point of test driving iStudio left a rancid aftertaste. For whatever reason the connection to the site kept timing out no matter how long I allowed my browser to retry. Meanwhile all other avenues of Net activity continued to function normally. Late into the night the download finally connected and completed. I gave iStudio the benefit of the doubt since who's to say who or what the culprit behind a Net glitch is. Unfortunately suspicions immediately returned as right after launching the application iStudio informs me that it can't connect to it's license server in order to download a trial license. Of course this meant I was stuck test driving a worthless version of iStudio, penalized with reduced functionality (One of the WORST models for demonstrating shareware, especially in modern times).

Unable to obtain trial License.
An error occurred at the license server. iStudio Publisher will run in unlicensed mode. The application will run with reduced functionality. You will not be able to Save or Print documents. If you are having problems, you can use the Help menu to check for the latest updates.If you need help, please inform us using the feedback form at www.istudiopublisher.com

One glance at the icon and I was already wary of the application before I even launched it. Though it may sound trivial, credibility with the target market is immediately put into question by the fact that a touted "design tool" sports an icon that actually spells out the application name on the symbol. An icon is a small, simplified, recognizable (not readable) graphical representative of something larger. Hence literally spelling out the name on an icon:

  1. Defeats an icon's entire purpose
  2. Is impossible to read in small contexts (e.g. in the Finder)
  3. In the case of application icons redundant as the text is repeated in the name
  4. hinders localization due to the involvement of language

It's sad but true that the icon did turn out to be an omen for things to come. There are plenty more features in iStudio Publisher that don't look and feel very Mac-like at all. Off the top of my head I recall the first thing my eyes were drawn to was the tool palette's clunkiness, including space wasted on it's fat palette border. The list goes on but I've allowed iStudio to waste enough of my time already (especially with a worthless "reduced functionality" demo) It's safe to say that the proof is not in the pudding when it comes to this application.

This package feels barely even beta ready, I can't help but wonder if someone rushed it out the door for some reason. Some of us were hoping for Apple Pages gone "the whole ten yards" but without crossing the border into needless Adobe bloat. Instead it feels, in a certain sense, more like a Novamind or Mindjet Mindmanager as compared to OmniGraffle. The overall experience feels much more Software Developer-laden with barely any strategic, well thought out implementations from Aesthetic/Usability/Experience Designers. In the case of iStudio Publisher, "Desktop Publishing Simplified" is nothing more than three words that carry little if any weight.

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