When you are ready to purchase the most recent release of your graphic design or desktop publishing application to get the latest and greatest tools, make sure you know what you're paying for. We've taken a look at some of the most popular titles and provided a list of reviews from around the Web. Before you head off to the computer store, find out if the upgrade is worth the price or whether you might want to wait until the next version.
- Adobe Acrobat 5 (designer-info.com)
Minor improvements across the board and some important behind-the-scenes advances make Acrobat 5 an even stronger publishing platform...
- Adobe Illustrator 9 (webtools.com)
After years of playing catch up with other Windows drawing programs, Adobe has finally managed to take a big stride forward with Illustrator 9...
- Adobe InDesign 1.5
- Adobe Photoshop 6 (designer-info.com)
Photoshop 6 redefines the standard with massive improvements in its user interface, layer handling, text control, workflow support and paper and Web-based output. And now it handles vectors too...
- Microsoft Office 2001 Macintosh Edition (cnet.com)
Microsoft suffers from a deserved reputation for sprawling, clumsy, hard-to-learn applications bogged down by hundreds of unnecessary features. Not so with Office 2001 for the Macintosh...
- Microsoft Office XP (windows-help.net)
Office is such a massive collection of applications, and the individual applications have such a huge number of features, it is nearly impossible to write a complete review...
- QuarkXPress 4.0 (desktoppublishing.com)
The QuarkXpress 4.0 release offers a combination of 75 new features that outshines even its strongest rival, Adobe Pagemaker™, except for one area: web documentation...




