We're going through some growth in providing variable data print, and we're finding more and more projects that completely outstrip Indesign's simple VDP capabilities. We're definitely hitting the 9,999 page limit in Indesign, as well as its propensity to bog down and often crash with increasing numbers of fields and records.
The projects that have killed Indesign have been a 60,000 record mailing with just address data, and a series of pieces that use 30-40 fields of data and have around 10,000 records each. Breaking the 60,000 piece project into 11 files sucked, and still took the better part of a day to merge and RIP to our Docutechs. The other project had to be broken into chunks of 500 and took the better part of a week to process. The catalyst for my search for better software is a 100,000 record project with 20-30 fields. I'm sure I'd have to budget 2 weeks of processing under Indesign, assuming I did nothing else in my work life.
So, our software needs to move up to the next level. It appears XMPie Udirect is about $3000, and PSM is $6000. We're Mac-based, so either seems like it would work there. Unfortunately, my boss is under some odd impression that good VDP software should be about $500.
Anyone have any impressions as to what the strengths and weaknesses of either product is? The $6000 pricetag of PSM is a pretty big weakness if I have a boss who thinks he'll be spending $500. ;-)
XMPIE doesn't have the limitations of InDesign's Data Merge.
If you use XMPIE for Dynamic Print to PDF, XMPIE will create merge records into the layout into a temporary, fat PS file (not into a new document). Then the PS file is processed and imposed into an optimized PDF file (thin). You can produce tens of thousands of records per hour this way without breaking a sweat. Even running a single instance, I've seen 20,000 rph in a font-intensive 7-switched layer document with small greyscale JPGs.
If you use something like PPML, the output time would be about the same as Optimized PDF. Using merge-able assets, PPML could be much quicker, but it doesn't have the flexibility as PDF.
I don't know current prices, but we could have bought the basic uCreate plug-in for Mac right around $2000 back in 2007. That's all we needed, along with Filemaker Pro for database processing and Windows software for USPS presorting.
I recently ran a complex 80-field job with 30+ layers, with a few EPS logos. I got 5,000 records per hour per CPU (20,000 rph total).
I used to run Fusion Pro Desktop. It was OK, but is nothing like XMPIE. One thing that swayed me from programs like Print Shop Mail, Planet Press, and Fusion Pro is that I must use a different layout program than the source document. That is, I'd basically have to rebuild the customer's VDP layout from InDesign into something like Fusion Pro. This added time to the job, and apps like Darwin and XMPIE function as plug-ins to Adobe InDesign. You just link to a data file, highlight the customer variable, and insert the field. All font formatting is maintained, so it's a huge time saver. I also get to use PREPRESS people for layout programming instead of DATA PROCESSING people, who often do not understand the nuances of print production. It's far easier to maintain the visual appearance of the VDP job if I have prepress people working it, and using the same tools the designer did.