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Reprieve for Booting New Macs With Mac OS?
Posted by
pudge
on Tue Dec 10, 2002 09:09 AM
from the yay-quark dept.
from the yay-quark dept.
MatthewRothenberg writes "Apple has announced that as of January, new Macs will boot with Mac OS X only, but now MacInTouch reports that there might be a reprieve in the works for booting with Mac OS. According to one reader, a Quark representative has been calling pro publishers to ease their worries about the lack of a Mac OS X-native version of its QuarkXPress DTP program; after talking it over with Quark, Apple has agreed to move back the Mac OS X-only deadline until June." I can imagine that conversation with Jobs: "Why don't you just finish porting your freaking product already?"
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Well Sometimes Portings isnt so easy and quick. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Well Sometimes Portings isnt so easy and quick. (Score:5, Informative)
We ran a story about that on eWEEK a couple months back ... From what Quark's been saying [eweek.com] at Seybold San Francisco and other gatherings, XPress 6.0 will represent a whole new code base, not just an upgrade optimized for Mac OS X's Carbon APIs.
Parent
Re:Well Sometimes Portings isnt so easy and quick. (Score:3, Insightful)
Just how difficult is it to port a Mac OS 9 app to Mac OS X's Carbon APIs? It's not that hard. Carbon apps are native Mac OS X apps and still binary compatible with Mac OS 9.
If Quark had not wasted YEARS rewriting Xpress from scratch (ala Mozilla), then Adobe InDesign would not have made the inroads it has (ala IE). Imagine a world a few years ago where designers had to choose between upgrading their huge library existing Quark files to a Quark XPress 5.1 Carbon app for Mac OS X or starting over with the incompatible, untested Adobe InDesign 1.0? Adobe wouldn't have had a chance..
Joel on Software: "Things You Should Never Do, Part I" [joelonsoftware.com]
Re:Well Sometimes Portings isnt so easy and quick. (Score:3, Insightful)
I honestly don't think that most people would complain too much if a program was fairly good but didn't use all the features of the OS. I mean most people were happy with Quark that barely used any OS7 feature.
The big question really is how good Quark will be. After all the disparaging comments by the Quark head, I'm none to optimistic that they'll do that good a job. This is an excellent way for Adobe to gain market share.
Re:Well Sometimes Portings isnt so easy and quick. (Score:2)
if by coding tricks... (Score:2)
You're exactly right about the "hacked up" bit. In any other Classic application, porting is relatively easy -- just recompile your code using Carbon and you're on your way. Quark XPress, on the other hand, needs to be rewritten from ground up.
Personally, I think this delay is great for the desktop publishing world, because it's allowed InDesign to get a (minor) foothold in the industry.
Quark can't afford to make a mistake (Score:3, Interesting)
In fact, InDesign 1.0 was garbage, but Adobe didn't care. They knew that time was their real advantage, and that as soon as they released a good product, everyone would forget the past. Well for Quark, all they have is the past. The vast majority of people who use Quark do it only because it's what they've always been using.
My guess is that Quark 5.0 will be so freakin' amazing, that people will forget how long it took to come out. In fact, I bet some people will laud Quark for taking its time and releasing a quality product.
Re:Quark can't afford to make a mistake (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Quark can't afford to make a mistake (Score:2)
Steve Jobs/Fred Ebrahimi love-in (Score:5, Funny)
Every other product you've launched APART from XPress has failed. Most of your user base is on the Macintosh. They're going to Mac OS X and you're holding them back. Meanwhile, Adobe has a product that works on X now...today... and can be used with a little prior knowledge of Photoshop and Illustrator.
Steve's slide was:
There's a significant percentage of major publishers who might just take this opportunity to dump the Macintosh and slide all those legacy Quark files over to Windows. Because, really, is that migration going to be any more fraught than a forced migration to X when you don't even know if your principal software (and attendant Xtensions) is coming along for the ride? XPress on Windows might be an unpalatable choice, but at least it's there. Right?
I've completely forgotten the point I was trying to make.
not Quark related (Score:5, Interesting)
Qaurk's market has shrunken noticably enough that not offering OS X ported version is no big deal...
Dinosaurs...
Re:not Quark related (Score:2)
the policy on their board.
Anyway IBM's docs [ibm.com] still has the release date on the 970 as "2003 2H" whatever that means. Since they have 2002 2Q for samples hopefully Apple will have a revolutionary change for mid year.
Re:not Quark related -- Education probably had say (Score:5, Insightful)
Never mind that our next budget year isn't 'til June.
I think this will allow schools to make one more year's worth of purchases that are still OS 9 compatible.
One more year of OS X's maturation (both client AND server) will really really help schools make the transition.
(Not to mention we have to save our pennies and budget for new versions of Office, PhotoShop, etc., since we don't want to buy more RAM to run X just to use all classic apps...)
I'm still having bad dreams about how we're going to train everyone to use OS X, or how a mixed 9 and X environment will work.
(I don't care how flawed it was, people will MISS that darn old Chooser)
- Peter
Parent
Re:not Quark related -- Education probably had say (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not an issue of how flawed Classic was. What's important is that OSX is built on rock-solid open technology, the same that is being used on the world's best servers and workstations. I just got OSX a short while ago. Pretty soon, I'll be figuring out how to run a cron job. That knowledge is not Mac-specific. It's general computing knowledge. I like that.
Screw Quark (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Screw Quark (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Screw Quark (Score:2)
Re:Screw Quark (Score:3, Informative)
What good should that delay be? (Score:4, Interesting)
What about existing workflows and applications for scanning, printing, ripping etc. that either don't exist on X or cost a fortune to update I can imagine that the inevitable switch from Photoshop 5.x to Photoshop 7 might prevent a couple of companies to do so.
Now, if Apple starts delivering OS X-only Macs, what exactly are OS 9-based companies going to do? They can't buy new fast Macs, as they are not supporting OS 9. It might well be cheaper to switch to Windows... Dangerous game, Apple.
Re:What good should that delay be? (Score:5, Informative)
That's exactly what's happening in a lot of print and design shops, though. They're buying brand-new dual-processor G4s and running OS 9 on them full-time just for Quark. Every other program they'd need runs under OS X-- even though a few of them only run in Classic-- but they have to stay on OS 9 for Quark.
And it's not even that Quark is that great. InDesign has it beat in almost every category. But there are millions of Quark files out there that people still need to use. Dropping Quark completely just isn't a practical option.
What about existing workflows and applications for scanning, printing, ripping etc. that either don't exist on X or cost a fortune to update
Virtually everything you'd need to run a print shop has been ported to OS X. Practically everybody's using a PDF workflow these days, and OS X has better PDF support than any other OS. As for ripping and printing, all of that is being done with Windows. The Windows RIP just sits there in the corner, humming to itself, and chews through PDF all day and night. The interactive tools, though, are all on OS X except for Quark.
Parent
Re:What good should that delay be? (Score:4, Informative)
Exactly 100% of the Mac-based publishing pros that I know personally (1 local tabloid and 2 unrelated freelancers) are indeed sticking with OS9 solely because of Quark. They really want to come over to crash-free OSX, but QXP is their livelihood.
I've suggested InDesign, but they don't want to risk problems with converting their old files.
Parent
Quark? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Quark? (Score:5, Insightful)
Assuming you're not just kidding ... :-)
QuarkXPress has long been the Big Kahuna of page-layout packages (after overtaking Aldus' pioneering PageMaker app back in the early '90s).
Professional publishers have invested billions of dollars into desktop workflows built around the Mac and XPress and involving all kinds of software plug-ins required to make all the hardware and software in a publishing operation work almost seamlessly. (Older versions of those plug-ins won't work with a Mac OS X version of XPress.)
Publishers are very conservative about making sweeping technological changes, but the whole shift to Mac OS X is ultimately going to force them to make some serious choices -- especially if there's a serious temporal disconnect between the arrival of Mac OS X-only Mac hardware and a Mac OS X-native version of their centerpiece software application.
Once you fold in all the imaging peripherals, client-server solutions, fonts, graphics applications, color-calibration technologies and whatnot, it's a wonder that stuff gets published at all. And when you're trying to use the same content for various print and electronic media, it gets even nuttier.
Even in these tight times (maybe especially in these tight times), there's a lot of money riding on keeping the whole house of cards stable, and the prospect of some sort of disjunct between publishers' longtime preferred platform and their longtime killer app is daunting.
Parent
Re:Quark? (Score:2)
All design for publishing is done using pretty much just three programs (or four if you count the text that was provided in MS Word format): Adobe Photoshop for bitmap images (photo's, paintings etc.). Adobe Illustrator (sometimes Macromedia Freehand) for vector drawings, and Quark XPress to arrange it all together on a page and to format the text.
Of all those programs Quark is perhaps the most indispensible. They benefit from exactly the same kind of dynamics that Microsoft Word benefits from - EVERYBODY uses Quark & expects Quark files and has a hard time if they recieve anything other than Quark files. Adobe (which you might have noticed produces the other 2 software packages used by designers) is trying to move people to their new competing product InDesign but Quark is so well entrenched Adobe is finding it difficult despite enormous advantages. Adobe has immense credibility, they're made of money, produce the two other essential software packages as well as most of the industry standard file formats like PostScript, EPS and PDF, and InDesign is available on MacOS X the newest and best OS from the computer company that still dominates the publishing industry - and Adobe is still having a hard time breaking in on Quark's business.
As a side note: Quark is actually the name of the company - the software is actually named XPress or "Quark XPress" like "Adobe Photoshop" but since Quark unlike Adobe only has that one product everybody calls the software "Quark"
This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:5, Insightful)
I adopted OS X well, but was still have uses for OS 9, as on our iMac. The OS X was a novel transition for me, as a 15-year Mac user, because for the first time I had to upgrade several apps to work under the new OS (Classic Mode is not a panacea!). When Apple starts to disconnect from the legacy machines, the software publishers will also do so, if only because maintaining different versions for different machines is too onerous. But many of us have funky old programs that will never ever be updated because their authors have moved on, or the upgrades offer nothing we want to pay for -- we just want to continue on as we have. That won't be possible for long, esp. if the hardware path abandons our antiquated (read: 3 year-old) ways.
Concretely, I first heard about this from the IT guy at my kids elementary school, which has a substantial flotilla of iMacs. He said it was going to be a pain for them, and with PC forces already snipping at the Macs -- the school admin and high school computers are PC's -- this could portend bad stuff for Mac land. It is a fact of life that the schools buy buy new machines to replace broken ones or expand, and if that necessary path is suddenly encumbered by new transitions and expenses, well, some places will decide it is an opportune time to homogenize the fleet.
Just some musings
Re:This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:2)
I think that Apple is pushing everyone to move to OS X because Jobs is a big control freak and hates the idea that anyone is still using OS 9. From NeXT to Aqua, OS X is really *his*, and OS 9 is not.
Re:This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:5, Insightful)
OS 9, despite all the amazing things Apple was able to get it to do, was still Windows 3.x era technology. While it was more stable than Windows 9x (in my experience), a single faulty application (frequently a bad port from Windows) could bring it down. Instead of getting your work done, you had to sit there and wait for it to come back up (at least it had the good graces not to try to pin its crash on you, unlike Windows' telling you that you didn't shut the machine down properly).
Apple has to move on, or it will die. Its products need and deserve a modern, tough OS that can stand up to today's demands. They took 10 years, many false starts, and one near death experience, to get here. OS X, in its current form, was announced way back in May, 1998; which was four years ago. It will be two years after OS X.0 was released before they stop selling machines with OS 9 installed. And OS X still can run older programs (even many crufty ones) in Classic mode. How much slower and gentler could they possibly make this transition for you?!?
OS X has rekindled interest in the Mac. Slashdotters that once declared eternal hatred for Apple now proudly tote iBooks. Apple's decision to give the programming tools away for free has resulted in a great blooming of new software for the Mac. Individuals and companies that used to do NeXT software have started developing for the Mac. The open source community is porting every Linux app that doesn't sprout legs and run away. Young people, once daunted by the high cost of development tools, are learning to program and creating hordes of new freeware and shareware. Check out the Mac section in your local Borders, and you will see lots of programming books. I think I even saw a book on, gasp, Mac game programming!
Heck if you want a real miracle, look at the server side. Before OS X Server and XServe, Apple had practically nothing on the server side. In a matter of months, they went from nothing to being the fifth largest server maker in the US!
Thanks to OS X, Apple's future shines bright indeed. Which is good for you, because as hard as it may be to upgrade to an OS X only Mac, it is even harder if no one is around to make them.
Mothra, Queen of Monsters and Apple's forever friend, first switched on this date in 1994 ("Godzilla vs. Space Godzilla").
Parent
Re:This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:3, Insightful)
I went and read the official Apple announcement [apple.com] -- apparently any bugs experienced by users are actually features.
I can still run ancient 68000 code from college CS, which is cool, but the Classic has failed in some significant cases, esp. anything involving older external hardware. Just how necessary it is for them to require OS X-only boot? How does it benefit us? Or are we mostly talking about Apple's bottom line?
And, to repeat myself, I mostly wonder what this portends for the future. Better to start asking Apple now (and I'm sure at least a few on their engineers read
If that is the likely future (who knows what Apple's future is? certainly not Apple) I'm going to be looking for a new train.
Re:This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:2, Insightful)
9 died four years ago, the corpse just hasn't stopped moving yet. Soon it will, thank God. X is not radical or new at all, it is proven technology dating back fifteen years. It isn't like Apple just announced X, the first public beta came out a long time ago. In case you can't put 2 and 2 together, Jobs ran NeXT before he came back to Apple. He brought with him a breath of fresh air, and something that is good for the computing world. In fact, I think it wouldn't be unreasonable to say that OS X saved Apple more than it has doomed it.
Re:This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:3, Insightful)
There was much better backward compatability, but there were your inevitable programs which simply would not run in OS 7. Back then, Apple's answer was "Upgrade your programs".
There are reportedly ways to fake out the system into booting to OS 9. There was a post even here on Slashdot, but bugger me if I can find it.
Re:This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:2)
I can't find the specific "trick", but I can't do everything for you.
Re:This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:2)
Re:This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:2)
Huh? I can run Windows 3.1 apps on Windows 2000.
How is that not compatible?
Re:This bothers me, as a Mac supporter (Score:2, Informative)
Apple has two such changes that affected backwards compatability in over 18 years. Windows breaks something at every version, which happens almost yearly now it seems. Apple did have to abandon old outdated code and processors.
The OS X was a novel transition for me ... I had to upgrade several apps to work under the new OS.
But by now most OS9 apps need upgrading anyway for compatibility with others. And if you have the latest version of a modern title, then it is probably both OS9 and OSX compatible.
many of us have funky old programs that will never ever be updated
I have not yet run into a program that won't run in classic and has no replacement. Especially since the Open Source community has filled the ranks once occupied by the sharewarers. The costs I've incurred replacing software have been limited to Photoshop 7 (to replace version 3, which actually ran really well in Classic) and InDesign (to replace Quark, which was nice in Classic so long as I hid it to switch apps). Thanks to Apple software deals I paid around $400 and both. Not to shabby really.
I can appreciate the benefits of things like abandoning the 68K
Classic Mode is not a panacea!
I'd comment, but I'm going to play a game of Keys to the Castle right now.
Quark is just an excuse for Apple (Score:2, Interesting)
They alienated thousands with the mis-handling of
Apple is only too happy to back off of this "shove X down your throat" move and blame Quark.
Re:Quark is just an excuse for Apple (Score:2)
Second, as another poster has already pointed out, you need to get over the attachment of significance to version numbers.
Now to the meat:
Your point about the upgrade price for existing workstations is way off. Multiple copy upgrade licenses of the major design apps are available on the cheap and, further, not really a cost at all since most agencies, printers, production houses, etc. try to stay relatively up-to-date and, as such, would be buying carbonized versions anyway. (Major exception: Quark 3.x It's stable, it's relatively predictable, and it's an entrenched workflow.) Most of the upgrade cost is going to come in training and shifting into a revised workflow, not in infastructure.
Major Restructure... (Score:3, Interesting)
But, keep in mind. Quark is in the process of closing it's main office, in Denver completely. All development and support has been shipped over seas to India. Denver has a major growth of unemployed Quarkies now... things are getting interesting.
I won't post the obvious rumors that are about town, but if you've got a chance, I'd high recommend giving InDesign a look, it may be worth it in the end.....
Drop QuarkXPress (Score:3, Interesting)
Quark is a private company (Score:3, Interesting)
I've already stated my two cents on my blog about Quark's machinations. [blogspot.com] I do have one item to add: Quark appears to have hedged its bets. It knew full well of Apple's commitment with Mac OS X over 3 years ago. However, like many companies, they've been burned when Apple changed gears on their OS plan and announced several Yet Another Operating System Plans in the latter 1990's.
So Quark went on with its Mac OS 9 version of QuarkXPress (5.0) just in case Apple's OS X plans got chucked. Now that OS X appears entrenched and with direction, Quark is working on the OS X version. The question why they are so slow to port is up to speculation.
However, I don't feel that Quark's new OS X product will compare to InDesign 2, which has had a larger head start in both Mac OS 9 and now a Mac OS X version. It only takes two or three versions of an Adobe product before it has refined into a competitive product.
It's even possible that Quark has lost programming staffing and has had a harder time porting. That's just speculation, but it's yet another idea that makes you go "hmmmm."
The matter of costs (Score:3, Insightful)
So it's a good thing Apple's trying to force us. But it may be quite a pill to swallow for some. And I think "Classic" Mac OS machines will be around for some time to come.
BTW: Personally I LOVE OS X. I'm never going back.
Re:The matter of costs (Score:2)
Frankly, no one is telling people to get rid of their old stuff and replace them with brand spanking new G4s RIGHT NOW. If you've been going well with old 9600s and 8100s for this long, and they're still functioning, who cares? It's not like you can get replacement parts anywhere but eBay or Preowned Electronics nowadays. They'll continue to run the old OSes until they just stop working.
However, a changeover is eventually going to be coming, and me and my father have done yeoman's work in getting our clients moved over to OS X. Lotta hand-holding. Lotta panicked phone calls that they can't do X or Y. These people haven't the first clue what a file permission is. We were able to convince these people that it was going to hort whether they did it now or later. At least if they did it now, they'd have time to get used to it. Hell, these people still use Quark, even though they're all running X, as Classic mode works just fine. I feel sorry for people who refuse to make the switch. They're going to be in the most pain, make the switch to Windows they'll be so damn angry, and it won't be any better.
Repeat after me... (Score:2, Funny)
Seriously, though, those Quark guys must have used a crapload of totally custom code that wasn't in the Mac Toolkit, or else there surely would be a OS X version of XPress by now.
Or, maybe they lost all of the source code in a freak accident and are just stalling while they code up their next Adobe killer (yeah right).
Quark may have a good reason to wait (Score:2, Informative)
Now, I was all like, "Quark is, like, so committing corporate suicide by not releasing an OS X version of Xpress and InDesign, despite its many flaws, will, like, kick their asses and stuff," but not I think that perhaps Quark may be correct in waiting a wee bit. Despite no carbonized competition, InDesign has made almost no headway against Quark on the corporate side where it counts and, should Quark release a X-native version of Xpress in the first half of 2003 which Just Works, they may pull off quite a coup.
My take on InDesign: while it has some nice features, it has no killer feature.
Re:Quark may have a good reason to wait (Score:3, Informative)
What did I miss? (Score:2)
Good. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good. (Score:3, Informative)
For Jaguar [charlessoft.com]
For Puma [charlessoft.com]
They had it coming. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:They had it coming. (Score:2, Informative)
The statement about the UI being proprietary is sheer ignorance. The UI for version 4 is based on the OS 7 Appearance manager. Keep in mind that version 4 was released in 1997, when the Mac market was split between OS 7 and OS 8. Quark didn't adopt the OS 8 Appearance manager because that would have meant abandoning OS 7. Granted, using Quark version 4 today looks a little funny
Version 5 of Quark runs in only 8.6 and higher...and does comply with the OS 8 Appearance Manager. My guess is you are one of the people that didn't upgrade to 5 because it wasn't carbon (or Quark's insane pricing scheme was a drawback). I can understand that, but don't fall into the trap of comparing software written in 1997 with software written today.
On another note...I've never had any problems with Quark's shortcuts. To each his own I suppose
Re:well... (Score:2, Informative)