I've never tried Affinity, maybe I will look into that.And I'll recommend the Serif Affinity line of products INSTEAD OF ADO$BE.
Really.
Standards, yes. Make the job easier for all.+1 for adopting industry standards, for many reasons, being a conformist is not one of them.
Conversely I have had multiple professional relatives bring up the topic, not at my urging or comment, of how frustrating some specific software products can be for them as the 'standard' has made their jobs much harder than previous.Over the years I've experienced people, mainly in IT, who've let their anti-Microsoft, anti-Apple, etc. crusade overtake and possess their brains to the extent that at social gatherings they can only talk about the merits of Linux, Android, whatever (and their personal disdain for the industry standard).
Agreed. But when the 'standards' leading software is constantly shifting the product goals, usage, and PRICE without a compensating value there may be a use case to abandon that 'standard.'No one ever said industry standards are the best - however in an industry supplying and receiving services and data to many different parties; familiarity, compatibility and seamless handshaking are right up there in being on the front foot.
@TJPrinter 100% with you on that point, in fact Adobe CC is the only subscription software we have. We often receive Indesign packages which are produced in the latest version, so CS6 would be no good to us. Everything else is on premise, including some very old software (e.g. Sage Accounts 11 years old)Personally, I don’t like software that requires a subscription, so for me Acrobat it the only Adobe software I use now.
You mean output to Onyx. Onyx stands between your printers and cutters.If you want to design at full size go for CorelDraw. If you scale everything then Adobe. Personally I have both and use CorelDraw 99% of the time. Files are output to a Colorado, Arizona, Colex and Graphtec 9000 with no issues.
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