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I just received my copy of Adobe's new Creative Suite (the new Photoshop,
Illustrator, and InDesign programs). Instead of shipping with printed
manuals (now a $50 option of the suite), it ships with a 92 page Design Guide.
I like it. But I also wonder the history behind this decision, and if other
companies are doing the same thing.
I do wish that they wouldn't charge extra for manuals, but I found myself
reading through the Design Guide before I even started messing around in
the programs. The design guide goes through six scenarios (making a poster,
brochure, illustration, web banner, animation, and web site) and how a team
used the suite of software to make each product. This isn't a deep how to
for each thing, but it does talk about the tools available in each program
and some of the options available.
The Guide seems to address something that I frequently encountered when I
provided in-person technical support. I found that people learned what they
needed to do to get their job done, but they didn't "go exploring" in the
software. They didn't know that you COULD do a certain task, so of course
they never looked up HOW to do that certain task. This Guide shows the
COULD part of this, and gives you a little bit of the HOW (and also the WHY
- why CMYK vs. RGB, etc.)
Does anyone have any comments on this? Anyone that worked on this project
on this list? As I was thinking about this, I wondered if the writers were
frustrated that they had to produce something with more of a marketing
angle, or if they enjoyed writing something that people were more likely to
read. I did send a comment to Adobe that I liked the Guide, and received a
response ten minutes later thanking me for the comment, and that "The
Design Guide was something new for Adobe Creative Suite."