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This is a really bizarre question from my perspective. Here's why.
I recently assisted Adobe by staffing their booth at the recent STC
Conference in Minneapolis. If there were a single question that I heard over
and over and over again, it was the one you are asking. It was as if in the
keynote session, someone proclaimed that InDesign was deemed to be "The"
replacement application for Framemaker.
Unfortunately, I'm ill equipped to say whether this is true or not. But my
rudimentary understanding of things tells me InDesign is a layout
application. Something one might use for Newsletters or Brochures. And
Framemaker is for "long documents" as I understand it. Something along the
lines of a book ranging from 50 pages upwards to an unknown limit. So I see
these as two different tools for two entirely different purposes.
I was with another gentleman that had much more of an understanding of
InDesign than I have. He was shocked about it as well. However, he did say
that some changes occurred with the CS3 version that make it more feasible
for creating something that might span 150 pages or so.
Cheers... Rick :)
----- Original Message -----
From: "Wilhelm, Joel" <jwilhelm -at- athenati -dot- com>
To: "TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2007 9:18 AM
Subject: InDesign vs. Frame
> Any thoughts on using InDesign for manuals (150 pages or so)?
>
> Does it do what Frame does? I'd like to hear from users if they are on
> the list.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Joel
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