Caveat: my company was the original GMG distributor for North America (2003-2006)and is an EFI distributor for North America (2006-2009). I also worked for EFI.
Interesting question.
It's very similar to asking about comparing "Mercedes, BMW and Audi". There are also several subtleties here beyond the technical features of the software. I am not smart enough or well-versed enough about the technical merits of all 3 of these RIPs.
what I do know is that they ALL work just fine and they are ALL professional products made by good companies. The IPA "proofing shoot-outs" of 2006,2007 and 2008 substantiated that. Here are my random observations:
1. CGS and GMG are small, nimble compnaies that truly take excellent care of their customers and resellers. EFI relies upon OEM partners and distributors to do their biddings.
2. CGS and GMG are much more dedicated to the proofing market. They sponsor the IPA shows, they advertise, they are active with customers, publishers and agencies. CGS and GMG have much more robust product portfolios for proofing. (Ink savings products, color servers, remote proofing, etc.) EFI has a far superior offering for the wide format and grand format spaces.
3. EFI has "OEM DNA".....heck, while you are reading this look up and look to the right. See the Epson/EFI banner ads...? Bestcolor was purchased by EFI in 2003 and, at the time, had THE dominant market share. That share has been eroded significantly over the past 3-4 years by CGS and GMG as EFI has lost its focus in proofing in favor of the actual growth markets of wide and grand format inkjet. EFI once sold Bestcolor to Creo, KPG, Dupont and Heidelberg. Today, they have OEM deals with Esko and Epson. I see this sector growing for them.
4. I believe also that each of these 3 companies does have an are of expertise when it comes to proofing. GMG excels at packaging. (Even though EFI has recently cut a monster deal with one of the largest global packaging companies.) CGS dominates publishing. But EFI is a very easy to use RIP that is an "all purpose" RIP that can be a little more flexible. EFI has the only TRUE client/server architecture. EFI and GMG use the Adobe PDF Print Engine in their latest versions. CGS uses a ghost script clone but they will be forced to move to Adobe PDF very soon. That will be painful for them as it was for GMG.
5. CGS and GMG have paper strategies that they push hard. EFI licenses their name on Tecco paper in Europe and we once had EFI's name on our Validation media but we removed it earlier this year. But CGS and GMG are just putting their names on the mill's paper just like Epson does and just like we do.Tecco is one of the largest converters in Europe and they work with all of the RIP companies. German paper is "silly expensive" as Germany is one of the lost expensive places in the world to manufacture product. CGS and GMG import finished rolls into the US and are subject to higher import duties that make their premium papers between $1,20 and $1.45 per sq. ft. MSRP.....that is simply ludicrous.
6. EFI software is buggier that GMG. I do not know about CGS.
7. Originally, CGS was a reverse engineered version of GMG.....I believe.
So, no, there is no clear winner. GMG and CGS are great products. But, Epson is many things but stupid they are not. Why did they choose EFI?
What I do know is that all these RIPs work great with Chromaticity Validation Media....;-).
Hi Ian,
whilst a lot of the things you have mentioned are correct, some important points need to be corrected.
2. CGS is not only concentrating on the proofing market, but very heavily on the digital printing and wide format market as well. These applications have not been so color critical in the past, but are increasingly getting there. The key issue is color accurancy
and consistency. The market has very much honored CGS's involvement; The ORIS PRess Matcher was winner of the recent prestigious PIA InterTech Technology Award, and is a global partner of many digital press manufacturers like Xerox, HP, MGI and others.
3. If you look at the distribution pyramid, having a large market share in terms of numbers, does not necessarily mean you have the best products (pardon the pun!)
4. I can't see that GMG or CGS are particularly dominant in certain areas like packaging. It has more to do with different geographic markets. Since someone mentioned it here, the recent versions of the ORIS Color Tuner allows you to create your own custom spot color database (apart from PAntone, HKS etc. which are part of the application) but not only solids, you can dial in any percentage (or multiple values), using an iterative process. There are also the indispensable tools for packaging available, like the possibility to accurately set spot color overprints and transparency levels, halftone option, miss-register simulation etc.
With the ORIS Color Tuner // Web CGS has the perfect browser-based client/server architecture, which allows access to the workflow via LAN or web, using a standard browser. As the only Hybrid Proofing solution, it even includes soft proofing and proof certification in one workflow. No CGS, is not using, and has never used, a ghost script clone, but is one of the few companies which have developed their own rip. Actually, it has gone rather unnoticed, but CGS has indeed incorporated the Adobe Print Engine, and it was not painful at all. Still the CGS rip is part of the application, as it offers a number of advantages.
5. I can only say this for CGS, but it is certainly not the case of just putting a sticker on a roll of paper, and there you are. The ORIS line of nanoporous (as opposed to microporous) Pearl papers are exclusively produced with very tight specifications for CGS, and you cannot get them anywhere else. Without going too much into detail, these substrates have various advantages, like being completely optical brightener free, larger color space etc. etc.
7. CGS was a reverse-engineered version of GMG??? Ian, having been a GMG distributor, you should know better. That is one of the funniest myths I heard lately.
Now is there a clear winner? Since I am also selling not rips but color management solutions, you should run some tests and find out for yourself, but nowadays you should not only look at lab values, but how such a solution can be at the heart of your color requirements, color managing all devices and transformations centrally, in other words, soft and hardcopy proofing, analog and digital printing, large format output and much more. And you should see how such a system can be used by an average person, and not only your color guru, if you still have one in your company.
Best, Heiner