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View Full Version : QuarkXPress vs. InDesign, yet again!




eclipse525
Dec 13, 2004, 11:34 PM
Ok.... so all I get is die hard Quark heads telling me how InDesign isn't as good as Quark....AND I got fanatically InDesign users telling that Quark is gonna die and InDesign will be the defacto app for publishing/printing world.

Does anyone have any objective views on the future of these two Apps. and who really might be the program of choice?

Personally, I've tried both and still think Quark is solid BUT in all fairness, I haven't really given the lastest InDesign enough time. So, I really don't know at the moment.




~e



Mudbug
Dec 13, 2004, 11:54 PM
I've been a die-hard Quark user for years now (8 of them or so now) and I finally have started taking the move-over plunge into ID.

I'm planning on a gradual transition, since I still have a few thousand files that are in Quark 6 (which InDesign won't open) and I'll leave the legacy files to run their course in Quark. But honesly now that I've started a few new projects in ID, I think it really is the better platform. I say that now that I've just plunked down another $700 or so for a full copy of Quark with my new office machine.

I'm not an 'authority' on them by any means, and I'm still quite green with ID, but just seeing what it can do with photoshop files, I'm impressed. Quark is still a powerhouse, regardless of what the critics say, and I think it's easier to do straight production work with, but for designing things, ID is better, IMO.

And for anyone reading this that hasn't used either, and is wanting to get into the publishing world with both feet, I'd choose ID for that as well. If you can use photoshop, or illustrator, then you'll have no problem picking up ID. If you've been using Quark this whole time and are really comfy with it, know it's ins and outs, then you're well-suited to keep using what's comfortable. I don't plan on uninstalling it anytime soon.

Hope that helps...

Mud

Peyote
Dec 13, 2004, 11:58 PM
Quark has never really made sense to me....some things you adjust in the bottom toolbar, some things in side pallettes, you can't delete colors without selecting an object, no shortcut for exporting to PDF, the list goes on and on. To me, Indesign just makes sense when working in it. Plus it's a lot easier to work in Indesign, Photoshop, and Illustrator all at the same time, than it is to work in Quark, Illustrator, and Photoshop. If you know Iluustrator, Indesign is a breeze...a standard interface and set of tools is important to me.

The only thing I wish Indesign had was the ability to mirror flip an object across the x or y axis.

aus_dave
Dec 14, 2004, 04:29 AM
The only thing I wish Indesign had was the ability to mirror flip an object across the x or y axis.I may have misunderstood you, but if you pick up a corner of any object and move it past its opposite corner on the same axis it will mirror flip (x or y axis).

Belly-laughs
Dec 14, 2004, 05:32 AM
Both packages deliver good layout tools, but i find InDesign better by far. I´ve been using Quark since ´98 and after ID 2.0 I´m only using Quark on client´s request. Of course, I charge them more for the hassle.

When I say hassle I mean all the time you have to spend dealing with bugs in the app. Especially 6.0 was horrible. It would crash when auto-saving (!), crash when exporting to PDF, crash when pasting text… 6.1 is much more stable but not without it´s problems. And I will not get the free 6.5 upgrade after reading posts from all the pissed off users at the Quark forums (http://www.quark.com/service/forums/).

For reasons only Quark as a company can resolve I feel InDesign and the Adobe route is much safer. You get a stable app with lots of features that work. The integration with Illustrator and Photoshop is also a pus, maybe they one day become one?

By all means, I don´t hope Quark goes belly-up. Competition has proven to be good in a market dominated by one player for too long.


Peyote, to do a quick flip just select the object, klick on the little menu button in the transform palette and selct flip horizontal/vertical. To flip contents, use the contents tool and follow he same procedure. The flip axis depends on which control point you have selected in the transform palette.

iGary
Dec 14, 2004, 06:30 AM
The only complainit I have heard about ID is ripping files come print time....anyone?

Blue Velvet
Dec 14, 2004, 07:03 AM
It's hard to be objective when you spend your entire working life with an application, add to that the investment in training and the production workflow... plus the backlog of scheduled work that's due on your desk.

Apart from a few notable exceptions, I feel that the majority of Indesign users tend to be one-person or small outfits where swapping a core app is not such a big deal.

For larger publishers, investment in other workflows that use Quark apps like Copydesk make the decision to move to InDesign that much harder...

da_alchemist
Dec 14, 2004, 07:20 AM
I switched over to Indesign from Quark. InDesign integrates well with Photoshop and Illustrator; really easy to pick up if you have used other Adobe products; and it doesn't look as archaic as Quark!

da_alchemist
Dec 14, 2004, 07:27 AM
Sorry.. this might be slightly off-topic. Let's say you have two Indesign files open; is there a shortcut for switching between the two open files? I hate having to go up to the Window menu all the time.

Oh yeah.. and InDesign is great! Quark is good if you like old-school. I like old-school but not when it comes to programs...

thanx.

iGary
Dec 14, 2004, 07:43 AM
It's hard to be objective when you spend your entire working life with an application, add to that the investment in training and the production workflow... plus the backlog of scheduled work that's due on your desk.

Apart from a few notable exceptions, I feel that the majority of Indesign users tend to be one-person or small outfits where swapping a core app is not such a big deal.

For larger publishers, investment in other workflows that use Quark apps like Copydesk make the decision to move to InDesign that much harder...

I agree with you, however it is unbelievable how many of our printers are using Quark 5 and OS 9.

And they are not small printers...

zarathustra
Dec 14, 2004, 08:56 AM
I have used Quark from 3.0 to 5.0 and InDesign since 1.0. And I LOVE InDesign. I couldn't be buggered with Quark anymore. In short, if you do want to read what I think of it, do a search on these forums.

Anyway, our studio is 100% Quark free and we have not had bad links, missing fonts and weird problems since switching over (Preflight and Package built in, including packaging fonts). All of our printers made the switch about the same time we did and the ones that didn't, we got in touch with an Adobe rep and they "got them a deal they couldn't refuse".

To answer questions:

Cycling through documents is easy, since it's a Mac OS thing. Just hit command-` (that's the character in the upper left hand side). You can also use exposé to show all the documents windows. Did you know that you can have more than one window of the same document open at the same time? You could copy from one page to the other very simply this way...

Also to flip a placed image, or anything, for that matter, you can also put a minus sign in front of the scale in the Transform palette.

I would say use the one that works for you best, but keep an open mind. Trust me, I was a Quark fanatic in the days of PageFaker. It's just that someone came along and made a better product and I switched. Sounds familiar?

Peyote
Dec 14, 2004, 09:14 AM
I may have misunderstood you, but if you pick up a corner of any object and move it past its opposite corner on the same axis it will mirror flip (x or y axis).

I could be wrong, but I thought that doing the also changed the scale. I know there are workaround to flipping an object, I'm just wondering why there isn't an easy way to do it, such as in Illustrator.

Peyote
Dec 14, 2004, 09:18 AM
It's hard to be objective when you spend your entire working life with an application, add to that the investment in training and the production workflow... plus the backlog of scheduled work that's due on your desk.

Apart from a few notable exceptions, I feel that the majority of Indesign users tend to be one-person or small outfits where swapping a core app is not such a big deal.

For larger publishers, investment in other workflows that use Quark apps like Copydesk make the decision to move to InDesign that much harder...

One of those exceptions happens to be Fossil, who has a design staff of around 100 creatives). They switched to ID not too long ago. I think for the most part this is true, but not because large companies couldn't switch. It's a lot easier for one person or a small shop to switch, than it is for a large company. But ID has only been around for what, a few years? Give it some more time and you'll see more and more large companies switch....especially when it comes time to upgrade their versions of Quark.

emw
Dec 14, 2004, 09:36 AM
The only complainit I have heard about ID is ripping files come print time....anyone?

I'm with you on that one. I love ID's feature set from a design standpoint, but enabling all of those cool features (direct Pshop import, transparencies, etc.) makes printing them a chore at times.

Quark has for some time continued to drop the ball. They got complacent and have never recovered - pushing to match ID, they release buggy products that still don't meet expectations. Maybe 7.0. I mean 7.1...

neilrobinson
Dec 14, 2004, 10:26 AM
The only complainit I have heard about ID is ripping files come print time....anyone?


yep, i know it... spent far to many hours figuring out a set of guidelines... actually at work now 12:25 (im on night shift)... trying to get quark to print for a change.

Chip NoVaMac
Dec 14, 2004, 10:29 AM
Last year I transitioned my companies work from MS Publisher (I know, I know) to ID. I took a look at Quark, but for my needs I felt that ID (yeah, I am one of those one man shops too) had the relative ease of use and Adobe application support that made my life easier.

Sparky's
Dec 14, 2004, 11:01 AM
If you really want to hear from Printing, Pre-press, or Graphics professionals, who really use these apps then I suggest you visit:
http://www.prepressforums.com/modules.php?name=Forums

I have been in commercial printing over 35 years and 20+ has been in desktop publishing. I grew up with Quark and started with 2.x in the late '80s. I switched to ID a couple of years ago and started with v1.5 and now use CS (along with photoshop, Illustrator, Acrobat, and yes even Quark 6.5. After using both for some time I find ID far superior to Quark. Again I'm just a Graphics professional, but that's my opinion.

zarathustra
Dec 14, 2004, 12:31 PM
One of those exceptions happens to be Fossil, who has a design staff of around 100 creatives).

OK, I work at Fossil. It's actually more like 150, but "only" about 50 of us work on 2D/graphic design projects. Our whole studio is OS X, Adobe Creative Suite equipped. Granted we don't necessarily all have CS, but at the worst level we all have OS X 10.2.8, AI10, ID2, PS7. I give credit to our Mac IT support group who saw the benefits after letting us beta test certain products.

A lot of RIP problems occur when the tools are not used correctly, just like in Quark. You cannot half-ass a project and expect it to print well. I am not insinuating that any of us would do it that way, I am just making a general observation based on experience.

Gravity
Dec 14, 2004, 01:16 PM
I was a Quark user from 1992 until 2002. It was the tool of my trade and I loved it. But as I grew, it didn't.

When ID 2.0 came along, I gave it a month's try...and loved it! I stopped using Quark in '02 and haven't looked back. I love the tight integration between ID, Illustrator, & photoshop. I work so much more efficiently than I ever did before.

So I'm not objective. I never upgraded my quark from 4.1 I skipped Quark 5 because of the problems it was having...and by the time Quark got its pokey behind in gear to carbonize for OSX...I was already in InDesign. Quark dropped the ball years ago...and they're struggling to catch up, all the while losing customers to InDesign.

But I don't want Quark to go out of business. As many have said, competition is good. I just hope I don't have lots of problems sharing graphics files within the industry...having to worry about whether they're using Quark or InDesign!!! Things were so much simpler back in the 90's!

Peyote
Dec 14, 2004, 02:59 PM
OK, I work at Fossil. It's actually more like 150, but "only" about 50 of us work on 2D/graphic design projects. Our whole studio is OS X, Adobe Creative Suite equipped. Granted we don't necessarily all have CS, but at the worst level we all have OS X 10.2.8, AI10, ID2, PS7. I give credit to our Mac IT support group who saw the benefits after letting us beta test certain products.

A lot of RIP problems occur when the tools are not used correctly, just like in Quark. You cannot half-ass a project and expect it to print well. I am not insinuating that any of us would do it that way, I am just making a general observation based on experience.


Heh...I just interviewed at Fossil and didn't get it unfortunately. One AD (Paula I believe?) was in charge of the Fossil Brand, and said she didn't hire off the street anymore, pretty much from within. Of the other AD's I interviewed with, most were looking for someone with apparel design experience, environmental design experience, or product design experience, all of which I do not have...only print design right now. So I guess I never really had a chance. Oh well...must be nice to work for a company that values design, and is even built around design. Me? I work for an insurance company (blegh!) But I'm moving back to Austin hopefully in May, so I only have to hang on for a 5 more months!

Jaffa Cake
Dec 14, 2004, 03:40 PM
I remember at the time that InDesign first came out there were a lot of people in the design community hoping that even if the new software didn't actually dethrone Quark Xpress, it would at least give it a huge kick up the arse and make it get its house in order.

Unfortunately, that hasn't really happened – designers and printers seem to be sticking with Quark (albeit older versions as iGary mentions). I know from our point of view that switching over fully to InDesign would prove costly in terms of training and interrupted workflow, even before you consider buying all that new software – and we're a relatively small firm. A full switch over would be even less attractive for very large design firms and printers.

Personally, I've tried InDesign out, and my first impressions have been good. The integration with the other Adobe apps is a definitely in its favour. Of course, both apps have their pros and cons... but I really hope that InDesign takes off.

Anyway people, don't worry. Quark 7 will be out soon...

Blue Velvet
Dec 14, 2004, 04:11 PM
Anyway people, don't worry. Quark 7 will be out soon...

They had better give it away for virtually nothing. They can't afford to lumber waverers with yet another expensive release...

Although we're still a Quark studio, the hassles with Quark 6.1 are pushing us towards InDesign, in the sense of messing with it at home and in our spare time, at this stage...

Quark 6.1 (forget 6.5 until they've patched & repatched it) has been a poor release. As David Blatner said 'It feels like a bad hack'.

But it takes time to turn round a company and a flagship product...

Another observation is: 99% of InDesign users rarely talk with fondness about Quark -- once they've switched, nobody ever seems to contemplate returning... hmmm... reminds me of the new-found passion of switchers to another platform. These former customers will never return...

Jaffa Cake
Dec 14, 2004, 04:25 PM
Another observation is: 99% of InDesign users rarely talk with fondness about Quark
A large percentage of Quark users rarely talk with fondness about Quark!


Quark 6.1 (forget 6.5 until they've patched & repatched it) has been a poor release. As David Blatner said 'It feels like a bad hack'.
The last few releases have been very bad – buggy and unresponsive. Given that Quark has had a good five years or so to respond to InDesign's challenge, the current state the software is in is pretty inexcusable. I can't see Quark 7 bucking the trend.

Blue Velvet
Dec 14, 2004, 04:37 PM
A large percentage of Quark users rarely talk with fondness about Quark!

True. It's a hate-hate thing, but a bit like a dependency... a habit.

Still, I'm one of the few at work that likes the synchronised text feature in Quark 6. It's come in damn useful recently on a corporate stationary redesign project.

We held off on InDesign 1 & 2 at first because of it's lack of multi-ink support... damn, another reason gone!

I'm not too fussed about .psd import. Layered TIFs import just fine, you can mess with them to your hearts content & then flatten & sharpen before sending to press, anyways...

aus_dave
Dec 14, 2004, 05:07 PM
I could be wrong, but I thought that doing that also changed the scale.Try it and see. It doesn't change the scale at all from what I can see. It's a pretty robust shortcut.

eclipse525
Dec 14, 2004, 06:26 PM
Wow...some great comments on both apps. Thanks for the input. I've just begun to use Quark 6.5 and have had no problems. Seems to be a solid update. FINALLY!. Has anyone been using 6.5 and are there any bugs? I guess, I'm gonna give ID another look and see if it's that good. Funny thing is that I won a copy of ID 1.0 years back and installed it but found it buggy so I didn't even bother after that. Who know what the upgrade will cost.

~e

Jaffa Cake
Dec 14, 2004, 06:42 PM
Funny thing is that I won a copy of ID 1.0 years back and installed it but found it buggy so I didn't even bother after that.

Hmm... I've got a hazy recollection that there were quite a few problems with the initial 1.0 release of InDesign – as you mentioned there were a lot of bugs and it was a bit of a CPU hog to boot. Adobe issued an update to 1.5 pretty quickly.

I was always warned about '.0' software! ;)

areyouwishing
Dec 14, 2004, 08:06 PM
This is how I see it...

1. File Structure...
Quark forces designers to build nice strict files, this is becoming less the case with Quark Vista, and now they are talking transparencies with 7/8. Who knows how that is going to turn out.

InDesign lets users do a lot of questionable things that can end up having a negative output like transparent color shifts, drop shadows. They have been using these questionable things for a few years now and are continually getting better at it, when quark finally releases their first try at trans, Adobe will have conquered all the issues.

2. Speed...
Quark is fast, on a slow machine, on a fast machine, its fast.

InDesign is slower, but it launches faster than Quark.

3. Fonts...
Quark supports most fonts, has activation plugins, but doesn't have the ease of use in implementing Opentype ligatures, etc. NO OPTICAL KERNING SUPPORT!

InDesign was created by adobe with a completely new customized type engine, I prefer the control it gives over what quark has to offer, optical kerning is amazing, tab rulers are directly over the text box where quark is a guess and check method.

4. Images...
I have seen just about everything in a quark file except ai files, and PS files. even psds are supposed to be supported now with 6.5. The usage palette is a simple implementation that easier to use than ID's Links palette.

InDesign supports AI files, PS files, and just about everything. It's links palette has a few more features but it seems to be kind of a clunky interface.

5. File Creation...
Quark makes you jump through a few hoops to get a postscript you have to have a virtual printer and its kinda inconvenient. The default install of quark also offers NO built in Color Management for quark files, it just reads your embedded profiles in images. Color output can vary from Ill, to Photoshop, to Quark.

The Print engine in Indesign makes Postscript creation a snap, less hoops. Color management is driven the same way Ill, and PS are done, which makes color output EXTREMELY constistent.

6. Data Management
Quark and ID have built in XML parsers. Quark has MANY data plugins available, but less for the 6/6.5 crowd.

I prefer the built in XML support in InDesign over Quark because it just makes a little more sense to me, on a 500 node list its pretty easy to go from plain text to styled(sheeted) text in about 5 minutes...its very slick. InDesign has a lot LESS plugins.

7. Global compatibility
If you are sending something overseas, go quark, period.

8. Crashing
With quark you have the age old "autosave" feature where you get to tell quark how many minutes between freezing what you are doing and save the file automatically.

With InDesign it creates a temp log of everything you are doing, so if it crashes it automatically restores the very last function you did.


All in all its about preference, they both have pluses and minuses. But you can't deny that quark is now playing catchup on a feature for feature basis with InDesign. InDesign still can cause printing firms issues, but most problems have been solved and most rips are capable of matching the transparency differences.


About me...
I have been using Quark for about 5 years and ID for 2 years (on a reg basis) up until about 6 months ago it was all design/publication work, now I work as a prepress tech for a printing firm where I deal more with prepress, and deal with these programs from a ripping and color management standpoint. We still have less problems with quark, but most of our more progressive clients use InDesign, and that tends to be reflected in their work quality.

crackrock
Dec 14, 2004, 08:07 PM
This is a Screen-Printing perspective coming from a guy who makes a living in the prepress department accepting artwork from customers, trapping, making 4/c separations, outputting film, and doing densitometer readings - InDesign is better than Quark in nearly every way. Now I learned the stuff off of Quark and have been using it for YEARS, but InDesign tops Quark in nearly every catagory. Unless you are running OS 9, don't bother with Quark - upgrade to InDesign. Need reasons? I could go on forever, but here are some of my favorites....

1. OUTPUT PREVIEW!!! By far the best feature of InDesign, you can preview your trapping, spot colors, and get a glimpse of your cmyk seps without ripping anything. And if somethings not right, you just update the links and it refreshes immediately. Quark doesn't have anything remotely close. That little feature saved me weeks in ripping time.

2. You can place ANY file format. Try placing an .ai, .psd, .ps or .pdf into Quark, I just simply doesn't work. Like when all you want to do is add in color bars, crop marks, and registration marks but want to keep everything the same? Create a new InDesign document of whatever sheet size you are going to print, place the file in, add in your marks, and print to a postscript file.

3. Better color management. InDesign can warn you if things aren't in the same color space. Now realistically - most people use SWOP v2, but if that isn't the case... Quark won't tell you anything, InDesign will.

4. It's easier to get more done in less time. It runs faster. The shortcut keys are easier, you don't have to make boxes to place images into the file, you can just type text right in without making a box first, and you can change the display preferences to one have one high quality placed image show up high quality - the rest low res. This means when you are doing step & repeat work you don't have to wait and wait for the screen to load but still keep an eye on what you are doing.

5. More printing options. Printing a spot UV coating and don't want to have it interfere with your trapping? Doing lots of complicated trapping and putting some scrach-off ink on top of all of it? Just change the density of your spot color ink and let InDesigns trapping get it right for you. Custom screen angles? No problem. Want to make a last minute change to a spot color to 4/c? You can do it on the fly right before printing. Want to do that in Quark? You can't!

6. You can TYPE in the position of guides and placed items. Quark makes you use the Move command. That get's old when you are aiming for precision under unrealistically tight deadlines (I just emailed you the file, can you get 5000 sheets done by tomarrow morning?)

7. Spell check without going into the story editor. Now why doesn't Quark have this?

8. The functions of Distiller are built in. Outsourcing your work and know that the guy you are sending it to doesn't really know what he's doing? Make a PDF x/1a straight from InDesign and there's no way he can screw it up.

9. Multi-colored guides. Another one of those "why hadn't the programmers of Quark thought of this 5 years ago?"

10. It's less expensive! Spend $1000 on Creative suite and you get Photoshop, Indesign, Illustrator, and Acrobat. Spend $1000 on Quark and well... that's all you get. When I opened up the package for 6.1 and installed it I was so disappointed, like "that's it? I feel so ripped off!" (I have Quark for compatability only - I do believe Quark will die soon, but I have one big customer who insists on using it)

Now back in the day Quark was ahead of it's time, but not anymore. If you talk to any old designers they will tell you to use Quark, but talk to the younger crowd who's creating the breakthrough designs and they will unanimously tell you that InDesign does everything that Quark does 10x better.

I guess it's not bad to learn Quark for the sake of knowing it, but in the printing industry we laugh at people who want us to output Quark files. You won't earn much respect from me by giving me a Quark file, but I'd still print it with dead-accurate color.

eclipse525
Feb 3, 2005, 01:52 PM
I have quick question. This pertains to InDesign.

In QuarkXPress, under the paragraph attributes you can choose to add underline/Rules with specific lengths. Can I do this in InDesign? I couldn't find it.


~e

da_alchemist
Feb 3, 2005, 07:46 PM
I have quick question. This pertains to InDesign.

In QuarkXPress, under the paragraph attributes you can choose to add underline/Rules with specific lengths. Can I do this in InDesign? I couldn't find it.


~e

Yes. Use the type tool and place your cursor on the text which you want to apply the rule to. Click on the little triangle in your paragraphs palette and choose paragraph rules from the drop-down menu.

eclipse525
Feb 3, 2005, 09:14 PM
Yes. Use the type tool and place your cursor on the text which you want to apply the rule to. Click on the little triangle in your paragraphs palette and choose paragraph rules from the drop-down menu.

Cool...Thanks! Got it..... I'm really liking this ID thing. <lol>

~e

da_alchemist
Feb 3, 2005, 09:51 PM
Cool...Thanks! Got it..... I'm really liking this ID thing. <lol>

~e

Yeh, InDesign is awesome. I recently switched to it. I'm never going back to Quark.

Col. Panic
Feb 3, 2005, 10:59 PM
Started using XPress in the ealry 90s. Still using QuarkXPress 4.1. Just placed the order for 6.5 though. Couldn't convince the powers that be to approve a switch to ID. So we'll be an XPress shop for a while longer. Can't wait to finally get out of classic.

Blue Velvet
Feb 4, 2005, 03:13 AM
Started using XPress in the ealry 90s. Still using QuarkXPress 4.1. Just placed the order for 6.5 though. Couldn't convince the powers that be to approve a switch to ID. So we'll be an XPress shop for a while longer. Can't wait to finally get out of classic.

Quark 6.5 is a pig... many traps await the unwary.

Reliable PDF creation, sending files to a RIP, I could go on... Avoid the QuarkVista Xtension at all costs. Even though OS X can handle long file-names & extensions, Quark can't... :rolleyes:

Join/read www.prepressforums.com and www.quark.com/service/forums/

Edit: The most reliable way of getting perfect PDFs from Quark 6 is the old-fashioned way. Best described in this download here. (http://www.ppa.co.uk/pass4press/download_v4/Q6_postscript.zip)

eclipse525
Feb 4, 2005, 05:33 PM
Join/read www.prepressforums.com and www.quark.com/service/forums/

Edit: The most reliable way of getting perfect PDFs from Quark 6 is the old-fashioned way. Best described in this download here. (http://www.ppa.co.uk/pass4press/download_v4/Q6_postscript.zip)
Thanks for those links and file. Very useful. U Da Best!

~e

benwa02
Feb 4, 2005, 07:11 PM
I have never used Quark before but I couldnt imagine any program being any better than InDesign. The first day I opened InDesign I was able to start right away since I am well versed with Adobes PS and Illustrator. Very easy to get around if you already know Adobes products and even if you dont. I love InDesign and I cant wait until my next project with it.

Ben Kei
Feb 5, 2005, 03:55 PM
I'm only just getting my head into InDesign and so far I like what I'm seeing and using..

I'm not doing design too much.. I work in the digital department for a large print house so it's mostly end of line stuff.

One thing I think Quark still has over InDesign is it's output options to print (not talking print to file here). The output options in ID just aren't quite as streamlined as they are in Quark.. OK quarks output section is a real pig if you are just learning it! but once you know it it's pretty good and efficient at what it does, ID is still a bit bulky feeling in the way it sends to print.

iGary
Feb 5, 2005, 04:24 PM
It will take a while, but I hope ID eats Quark for lunch (probably not, huh?).

Their custoomer service stinks, they only just recently got the brains to release an education version (guess they got tired of all the college labs being filled with ID - ours is) and the new verification algorithym thing?

Eff that.

ID for me is totally more intuitive and offers an all-in-one package. I like that.

Most of our designers here at the firm love to hate to love Quark.

It's like a necessary evil or something.

benwa02
Feb 5, 2005, 04:31 PM
Only thing I came across so far that I dint like is that you cannot open ID 2.0 files with ID CS and vice versa. Dont know if that has been mentioned but that sucks.

Lacero
Feb 5, 2005, 04:56 PM
Is ID still a dog to run? I remember in '00 ID was all but unusable on the hardware at the time, when QX4.0 was top dog in performance. I still use Quark today so ID is not at all relevant to me.

benwa02
Feb 5, 2005, 05:07 PM
Is ID still a dog to run? I remember in '00 ID was all but unusable on the hardware at the time, when QX4.0 was top dog in performance. I still use Quark today so ID is not at all relevant to me.

ID runs mint for me. I never used ID in '00 so I wouldnt be able to make any comparison, but no problem over here.

Chip NoVaMac
Feb 5, 2005, 09:46 PM
Is ID still a dog to run? I remember in '00 ID was all but unusable on the hardware at the time, when QX4.0 was top dog in performance. I still use Quark today so ID is not at all relevant to me.

Have had no complaints about ID on my PB rev. B with 1.2gb RAM. Did a fullpage newsprint ad in 4 color, and there was just a minor slow down since I did not optimize the graphics. There were tons of "huge" EPS files and very large JPGs. They were much more than what I needed for the task, but didn't want to take the time and size them for my publication.

eclipse525
Mar 24, 2005, 08:42 PM
Sorry, got a dumb question....

How do you create crops in ID? Do you need a plug in like GLUON's to accomplish this?


~e

Sara7venus
Aug 22, 2005, 10:47 AM
I've been a user of both InDesign and Quark for many years; my perspective is a lot different than most, however, so my views may not apply to everyone reading this thread. I work in marketing/labeling in the healthcare industry as an in-house creative. I use Quark 6.5 at work, and Adobe InDesign at home. I work with many languages, including the "new" Central European (CE) languages and Greek/Turkish for European countries. The first comment I want to make on Quark 6.5 and laying out foreign languages is that it is a freakin' nightmare! :eek: Adobe has produced a very modern, unicode-compliant and top-of-the-line layout program, whereas Quark is still mucking around in the mire of ASCII character sets. This is a horrific experience for anyone dealing with several (and by several I mean like, 23+) languages, dealing with beween 4 and 6 individual character sets. My regional Quark rep. has told me that Quark 7.0 will be unicode-compliant, but I'm not betting on anything spectacular. Other designers in my company, and myself, have seen so many problems converting to Quark 6.5, we're afraid to move to 7.0, even if it is Unicode-compliant. It's a scary thing to know that the FDA is watching (among other regulatory agencies), and to be less-than-confident in Quark's ability to display font characters (ASCII or Unicode) correctly.

Blue Velvet
Aug 22, 2005, 10:52 AM
Other designers in my company, and myself, have seen so many problems converting to Quark 6.5, we're afraid to move to 7.0, even if it is Unicode-compliant.


Interesting post and one with which I agree. Quark's track record seems to be at least two major revisions to get a feature right if at all...

They've got a serious credibility problem and unless they virtually give v7 away for free, I can't see many designers getting that keen about it.

RacerX
Aug 22, 2005, 11:19 AM
Does anyone have any objective views on the future of these two Apps. and who really might be the program of choice?I don't use either (I use Create for all my needs)... so I guess I could be considered objective.

I have tons of experience with both of them as I have to support both apps with my clients and provide training on them.

Frankly, I don't think it would be a good idea for either to become defacto... History has shown that when one app dominates the market (like PageMaker once did and QuarkXPress once did) the users suffer because of it.

My opinion on both:

InDesign is a much easier app to achieve some very nice effects with. The fact that it's save to PDF function has almost all the same options as Distiller is very nice too. And when purchased with the Creative Suite, it has a price that can't be beat.

One of the things I saw of many of the designers I work with that now use InDesign was that they were spending a lot of time doing page layout in Photoshop and Illustrator and only used QuarkXPress to output the final product.

As for QuarkXPress... from a support stand point, it is about as bad a Mac OS X app as I've ever seen. And the fact that QuarkXPress was one of the last (if not the last) major app ported to Mac OS X sure didn't seem to mean that Quark spent any extra time on getting it right.

And QuarkXPress 5 was a slap in the face of it's user base.

And Quark had better start lowering it's prices and caring about it's users. It is no longer all dominant in this industry.

Right now, QuarkXPress is to expensive and to flaky an app. The only thing it seems to have going for it is users who are unable (or unwilling) to learn something new. And frankly, that is not enough. I know of entire publishing houses that have switch completely. And I also know of printers who now charge an extra $500 if you send them QuarkXPress files rather than PDF.



But, like I said, I don't want to see the end of QuarkXPress. I would like to see it try to compete with InDesign in the areas of function/stability, usability, and price.

With work flows ending in PDF, the industry doesn't need one dominant app... it needs competition to make sure that the end users aren't being abused (like QuarkXPress abused it's users for most of the last 10 years).


If you want to know which to use... only you can decide that.

jayscheuerle
Aug 22, 2005, 11:26 AM
Quark has never really made sense to me....some things you adjust in the bottom toolbar, some things in side pallettes, you can't delete colors without selecting an object, no shortcut for exporting to PDF, the list goes on and on. To me, Indesign just makes sense when working in it. Plus it's a lot easier to work in Indesign, Photoshop, and Illustrator all at the same time, than it is to work in Quark, Illustrator, and Photoshop. If you know Iluustrator, Indesign is a breeze...a standard interface and set of tools is important to me.

The only thing I wish Indesign had was the ability to mirror flip an object across the x or y axis.

You can, but not with the right click. Up top on the tool bar, far right, is a circle with an arrow in it, where you'll find Flip Horizontal, Flip Vertical, and Flip Both. Took me a bit to find this..

jayscheuerle
Aug 22, 2005, 11:28 AM
Sorry, got a dumb question....

How do you create crops in ID? Do you need a plug in like GLUON's to accomplish this?


~e

Do you mean crop marks in their visible workspace? I don't think it does this (like Illustrator does), but instead adds them when going to pdf or print if you choose (like Quark does).

RacerX
Aug 22, 2005, 11:31 AM
Only thing I came across so far that I dint like is that you cannot open ID 2.0 files with ID CS and vice versa. Dont know if that has been mentioned but that sucks.Yes, that was a pretty big problem early on. Adobe made major file format changes from 1.0/1.5 to 2.0, and then again from 2.0 to CS. My understanding is that the format has settled into something more stable with CS and CS2 rather than the wild jumps that came from... well, mainly from InDesign's lack of maturity early on.

What I'm getting from people at Adobe, that the formats will be incremental changes from here forward (rather than major jumps).

But Adobe is a corporation... and in the industry (of computer applications in general), changing the format is the easiest way to force users to upgrade to a new product even if there is no other reason for them to make that move. Microsoft has been using the format lock-in to heard people with Office (and some of their other apps) for years now.

jayscheuerle
Aug 22, 2005, 11:31 AM
Quark at work. ID at home. ID is my personal choice and I use it at work for one-off projects that our Production department doesn't have to pick up (they're still OS9). Someday, when everybody gets upgraded, I'd hope that ID would be a choice.

Interestingly, I'm still faster with Quark I think, but I just prefer ID...

prophet621
Aug 22, 2005, 01:59 PM
I'll chime in on this. I have been learning InDesign for a few weeks now and I am very impressed with it. It's a very polished, powerful and flexable app, particularly in CS2. Huge improvment over it's predessor Page Maker, which by the way I hate with an absolute passion. Almost bordering on a deep psychotic hatred.

I rencently got an ibook and many places in the Graphic Design field still want knowledge of Quark so I bought a copy from Ebay and installed it. Early impression... I would rather use PageMaker. Granted, I am still very new at Quark and am unfamiliar with all the tips, tricks and shortcuts but it really makes me long for the features of InDesign. I would rather bang my head against a brick wall for an hour than use Quark. I don't particularly care for the layout of the app and the learning curve seems to be overly complex.. in other words, feels very unpolished. Again, I haven't played with it much, these are just early impressions so don't get all anal about me critisizing it. :)

From my understanding, version 7 is said to be a major improvement to bring it in line with InDesigns capabilities and try to draw back some of the Quark users that the company had all but ignored so I'll be egar to take a peek at that one. As far as 6.5 goes, I'll grudgingly use it enough to get a fair grasp of it but I'll happily stick to InDesign as my app of choice.

jayscheuerle
Aug 22, 2005, 02:11 PM
Quark's peeks don't come cheep.