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Day August 15, 2011

Adobe Muse (Beta)

 

If you are in the web creation business it might benefit you to know that Adobe has released the public beta of its new website creation software, code-named Muse, on Monday. This is not Adobe first foray into the market. They are the power behind Dreamweaver, Image Ready and a whole roster of development tools however Muse is for graphic designers who want to create elegant websites without having to code.

Some who have been testing Muse are enjoying the tool’s functionality and featureset. What makes Muse stand out is the user interface and the design approach is similar to other Adobe Creative Suite applications, namely InDesign.

Graphic designers have spent years learning Photoshop and InDesign and work in print. It will work like this A graphic designer will create a website in Illustrator, Fireworks or Photoshop and then pass the flattened file off to web designers who will then do their best to code it. Now With Muse, Adobe hopes to eliminate that coding step for users whose sites don’t need lots of dynamic content — and who want to lay out and generate the code for their site with one tool.

The chief advantage is the small application footprint and lots of familiar features and functions.

Another great feature is that Museis an Adobe Air application, rather than a full-blown native app. Meaning it works on Mac and PC.

Muse was built to take advantage of certain HTML5 and CSS3 properties and to generate semantically-correct code.

One can add your own HTML snippets or dynamic content information to a Muse page, and the app also comes with a set of pre-defined widgets. These widgets are written in jQuery and can be modified like any other element. CSS3 transitions are also possible to create in Muse; the process is seamless.

One can also preview a page locally using the built-in WebKit browser or by opening up a file in the default app on your Mac or PC. This is great for seeing exactly how something looks in a browser before publishing.

Muse might best be used to prototype content that would then be implemented into other systems like WordPress. For instance, a page and section layout designed in Muse could become a new WordPress theme.

Pricing & Availability

Muse is available in public beta now, and Adobe has said the program will be free until its official release in early 2012.

Once Muse launches under its final name in early 2012, it will be available by subscription. This is the first Adobe product to have a subscription-only pricing scheme and it will be $15 per month with a one-year commitment or $20 per month on a month-to-month basis.

Users who want to publish their sites can choose to use Adobe Business Catalyst for their hosting needs and publish directly from Muse. If you have hosting setup elsewhere, you can export the contents of your site as HTML and upload the corresponding files, images, HTML and CSS files to your web server.

It might seem to some that instead of improving its core of existing solutions Adobe has chosen to borrow the best features from all of their mostly print centric applications and create a new reason for their loyal base of graphic users to buy into, learn and subscribe to. It might also breathe life into their recently flagging Creative Suite which has grown long in the tooth. It also works around the exodus from Flash by handily embrasing HTML5 and CSS3. Nothing wrong with that!

…So this is what has kept Adobe busy lately.

Moto-Google-rola

As long as Google was content and happy to stay exclusively in the software-Operating System business their many OEM partners were fat, fine and happy .

They all benefited greatly from Google’s willingness to license Android to just about anyone and everyone equally.

The recent announcement that Google is about toplunk down a huge fortune said to be as much as $12.5 Billion dollars to acquire Motorola Mobility Holdings surely makes them shiver in shear fear wondering if Google is getting ready to step up their game and play competively in the device sandbox and wind up changing the name of the game or the rules of the game.

Numerous companies, HTC included, have profited very nicely making handsets and smartphones running Google’s free Android operating system. But the shocking, devestating news that Google will soon probably be in the hardware device business in a big way is sure to cause both panic and concern among Google’s primary hardware manufacturing partners.

This all must great news to Microsoft who is hoping to attract those manufacturers and developers to the Windows phone platform, and to HP also looking to draw them to HP’s WebOS.

What seems pretty certain is that Google most likely will be going head-to-head with former partners so it will be no small task to convince them that things won’t change.”

Certainly we will closely follow this story.

The deal will first have to pass probes and regularatory scruitiny which might just take as long as a year. We should also keep an eye on how Apple responds to this new development and what effect it will have on the market dominant iPhone/iPad ecosystem.

Some believe that Google may be inheriting Motorola problems ranging from tepid device success to having lost serious market share and experiencing problems with delayed product releases.

Google on the other hand is flush with talent and might be able to right the ship.

Addendum: It turns out that mighty Microsoft was also in the running and in talks with Motorola, but as it turned out Google had bigger eyes, and a bigger appetite for Motorola and their many patents.

… Are we ready for a Google Droit?

M-Audio-Venom-12 Keyboard/Controller

Maudio-Venom-12

Maudio-Venom-12

If you are a stage performer, studio hound, or a Garage Band twiddler you want a quick way around touch screens and awkward overly complex controllers well M-Audio has answered your wish with the new Venom 12-Voice Virtual Analog Synthesizer

Features:

  • Vintage keyboards combined with modern digital processing
  • Aggressive new 512 single-sound patches and 256 layered patches
  • Intuitive real-time performance controls plus software editor
  • Endless sound design possibilities
  • 49-key, full-size, synth-action keyboard
  • Pro Tools compatible USB audio/MIDI interface
  • Playability: ready for the stage and studio playing right out of the box

The M-Audio Venom 49-key synthesizer combines the character of classic analog synths with modern digital processing to deliver an aggressive, infectious new sound. Whet your appetite with the included presets, then sink your teeth into creating original sounds—from atmospheric and subtle, to angry and downright nasty.

Easily tweak parameters from the intuitive top-panel interface, or explore endless sound design and configuration possibilities with the included software editor. Perform bass lines, leads, and more with a full-size keyboard designed to satisfy serious players. You can even use Venom as an audio interface with Pro Tools* and other music software—forming a powerful production machine to take your music in dangerous new directions.

Suggested Retail:$599.00

Cool Compact Camera: Leica V-Lux 30

I have a favorite camera, and its not a Canon nor Nikon. The Leica V-Lux 30 has won my heart and is the perfect compact camera for me to document my analog life in digital form. Now I can completely get away from lugging heavy and bulky SLR cameras to and fro. The Leica V-Lux 30 is a perfect choice with options and capabilities worthy of more expensive units.

FEATURES:

- 16× optical-zoom range for wide-angle and macro shots to telephoto.

- Aspherical lenses Leica DC Vario-Elmar 1:3.3-5.9 4.3-68.8 mm ASPH. zoom lens (24-384 mm, 35-mm equivalent) a range of focal lengths (24 to 384 mm)

- Video recording in 1920 × 1080i AVCHD full-HD w/ GPS data

- Continuous shooting mode (burst mode)

- Full 14.1 MP resolution

LCD touch screen

Offers convenient use and handling. Many features controlled by touching the screen with your fingertip or flip through captured images in playback mode and enlarge them with a tap of a fingertip.

Integrated GPS function

The camera’s integrated GPS module records the geographical coordinates of the location and the local time of every picture taken, and stores the data in the EXIF data of the image files.

Used in conjunction with social networks, image portals and map services, such as Google Maps and Google Earth, pictures can be sorted according to time and location and displayed in online slideshows or on maps at the exact location they were taken. In addition, the GPS function also shows sightseeing highlights and interesting places to visit in the immediate area. The Leica V-Lux 30 provides access to over 1 million points of interest.

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