AP90, there are issues with all software, the cons of CorelDraw certainly but more so Corel corporation is that they have totally left long document support go. Maybe that's because the return on investment is not there.
As far as I know therein lies the only real advantage for Adobe products. I could discuss the Illustrator support for extremely poorly created design with node counts out of this universe but why they only output when rasterized. Corel certainly took a different route with transparency but that's an advantage as it outputs more reliably on high end systems.
Corel's issues as far as their software is much the same as any other company, bugs, update shortcomings, that goes without saying. Adobe has the same issues so why discuss this they are simply matter of fact in this world.
MAC has had no real innovations since they became PC's, the OS has had little to no change which is demonstrated well by how many old MACs you see at print shops. I would talk about the MAC but what is there to talk about.
Corel of course is not widely used in Printing press graphics, is not taught in the education community as much, the user base is about 2.7 million, mainly in diverse companies, that do some print, some signs, some wide and grand format, some dye sublimation, embroidery cut glass and laser engraving. So it's a wild card.
The disadvantage is to the up and coming graphics creation generation, they are not learning to think differently. The MAC/Adobe workflow has in general remained the same since the 80's. Use a page layout application, create an image place it and link it, create a drawing, place it and link it.
Now that would be fine if we could look at the graphics industry as a whole and see a healthy industry, now we all know better than that! Do we want another 30 years like the past 30 years?
So where are we at, the Adobe workflow is as it was, we get files with missing links, missing fonts, transparency issues, about like it was nearly 30 years ago but worse since the feature set is more complicated and now a costly cloud based rental program. I would talk about the Adobe workflow but there really is not much new.
Where is the new graphic designer at? Shorter runs, a multifaceted needs, TIGHTER MARGINS.
Do they need Adobe?
No. What do they need?
A color managed set of tools that comply with the GDI, (CUPS in MAC) and postscript. At a cost effective price, period.
Photoshop alternatives, GIMP, PhotoLine, Corel Photo-PAINT, N color support, LAB, RGB and CMYK support all available in Corel only I believe.
Illustrator alternatives, CorelDraw, Inkscape, Affinity Designer, Xara. N color support, LAB, RGB and CMYK support all available in Corel only I believe.
InDesign alternatives, depends on your needs, up to 40pages CorelDraw does fine after that I have no suggestions.
So what to do? That depends on what you do! Except that you need compliance with the ICC, the GDI and postscript, ONLY! The rest is up to your skill set.
There are so few companies writing software for the MAC so there is little to talk about, the exact opposite for the PC and the only real growth in graphic output is on the PC side.
PC advantages, low cost of ownership, quick replacement high output, global support. PC cons MAC compatibility.
MAC advantages, MAC compatibility. MAC cons, MAC compatibility only.
ICC compliance as well as the GDI and postscript is a given as is N color support no one else should play.
Adobe Pros and cons, long document support, support across the print industry, poor support in other areas of graphics needs, high cost of ownership.
CorelDraw pros and cons, less support in the press industry, less support for long documents. Pros are 150' x 150' documents no need to work in scale complete compatibility in all graphics areas except long documents, IMO the real advantage is the interface, with the default workspace I can preflight objects in a file by clicking on it, no need for dockers and programmability of the application, LOW COST. Files and fonts are color managed in 3 color models, files and fonts are embedded, if a font can't be embedded a warning shows up, no missing links, fonts, publish to PDF supporting all 3 color models.
I'll talk Adobe and MAC when they do something worth talking about.