ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Become a ZDNet.co.uk member

SOFTWARE REVIEW

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print

Macromedia Studio 8 review

8.0

Editors' Rating

Excellent

Macromedia Studio 8

Elsa Wenzel CNET

Published: 07 Oct 2005

Macromedia Studio 8 is a complete toolkit for Web designers and animators, and it introduces new features that will make creative mouths water. Many digital content makers can find their way around Macromedia software in their sleep, but the upgrade to Studio 8 makes common tasks easier to execute for those without coding expertise. The suite wraps together an animation tool, Flash 8; a Web design application, Dreamweaver 8; and a graphics editor, Fireworks 8. Also included are the PDF maker FlashPaper 2 and the Web site manager Contribute 3. The vector graphics program FreeHand MX has vanished from the suite, partly because it duplicated functions offered by Fireworks.

The most tantalising new product in this bundle is Flash 8, particularly because it introduces alpha channel video creation and provides abundant new effects that animators can manipulate in real time. To shrink the file sizes and hasten the playback time of Flash animation on end-user desktops, Macromedia gutted and rebuilt its popular Flash Player. Flash, Fireworks and Dreamweaver also now optimise multimedia content for mobile phones, handhelds and other mobile gadgets yet to come. Just don't expect Adobe's plans to buy Macromedia to result in hybrid Adobe-Macromedia software quite yet; Studio 8 offers no such surprises. Studio 8 costs £699 (ex. VAT), or £299 to upgrade from Studio MX 2004 or earlier versions.

We installed the entire Macromedia Studio 8 suite in less than half an hour without problems on our test Windows XP system. To make room for the suite, Macromedia recommends freeing up 1.8GB of free hard disk space on a PC running Windows 2000 or higher. Once you open the programs, their well-organised interfaces look similar to those in Studio MX 2004.

Nips and tucks include zoom-in views to examine layouts, as well as collapsible palettes to free up the work space. You can even save your customized work-space arrangements. To minimise the amount of code wrangling, Dreamweaver now nests and colour-codes elements within Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). And Flash includes Script Assist (similar to the former Normal mode of Actionscript) to visually guide you through coding.

Macromedia aims to make its complex suite friendlier for people who lack coding knowledge, although amateurs will need some education before diving in, particularly for the intricate Flash and Dreamweaver. But professionals and design teams can jump right into work-flow improvements designed to reduce multiple round-trips between applications. Large companies also get tools within Contribute 3 to centrally manage Web sites with multiple editors. And subtle layout changes throughout the suite, such as ruler guides within Dreamweaver, help import graphics from Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator.

Macromedia has expanded Studio's tools for making dynamic and expressive content. To start, Dreamweaver lets you drag and drop XML feeds into pages, which is handy for newsy Web sites and blogs. The addition of FlashPaper 2 to the Studio suite adds the ability to make print-ready, interactive PDF documents within the suite. But Flash 8 offers the most-intriguing new toys, such as the ability to lay video on top of video so that you can make, for example, a superhero fly above a traffic jam. Flash 8 also handles pixel graphics for the first time and provides better font control. Both Flash and Fireworks get a bevy of new blend modes and filters.

The programs within Macromedia Studio 8 all include extensive help files, plus access to an excellent online support centre with well-written FAQs, tutorials and peer forums. Macromedia includes four 'getting started' tech-support incidents (a telephone call and follow-up calls for the same issue) within 90 days of purchase. But post-90-day phone assistance quickly gets expensive; $99 (~£56) for a single incident, and £250 annually for extended support plans. The £1,750 Silver support package provides help for unlimited incidents, as does the £2,170 Gold support plan, which adds direct contact to product engineers.

Macromedia Studio 8 components

Application
Price
Highlights


Flash 8
£499; upgrade £299 (Professional version) Animation tool supports blue-screen videos, pixel graphics and mobile content; rebuilt Flash Player


Dreamweaver 8
£339; upgrade £169 Web design tool improves navigation and work flow, with more support for CSS and XML


Fireworks 8
£249; upgrade £129 Graphics tool flows better with the rest of the suite; imports more file types


Contribute 3
£99; upgrade £49 Web site management program offers new tools for workgroups; integrates content from Microsoft Office

FlashPaper 2 £49 Creates print-ready PDFs or interactive SWF files

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Rate this product

Member Opinion

9.5

Average Member Rating

Spectacular

1 Member has reviewed this product

View Opinions by: Date Posted | Rating | Most Useful

Anonymous

Anonymous

Must have it!

Read more

9.5

Spectacular


Read all the member opinions

Overview

Macromedia Studio 8

Editors rating
Rating: 8.0
Verdict

Macromedia Studio 8 is a comprehensive and professional package that designs content for dynamic, multimedia Web sites and mobile devices.

Typical price

£ 699

Featured Talkback

How can it be true that doing the work of gathering and concentrating information about a person and placing it in a single database with multiple access routes; makes that information more secure?! I would suggest that most people would make the implicit assumption that that would make it *less* secure.

By: Andrew Meredith

Read full story:
Police chief criticises ID cards scheme

Discussions

ator1940 ator1940

Photosynth

Thursday 28 August 2008, 8:41 AM

2 comments