Ummm, there is a lot of cr@p on this thread,
Hey Cameron I see you already have a business up and running, what are you using right now and how is it working for you... any issues with the software you are already using?
Now how is Corel 100 times faster than Illustrator... you can design 100 signs to my 1! Oh man, I'm gonna switch and make millions!
You can't beat those crafty Canadians - They look just like us but are super smart.So your telling me Corel has turbo boost?
I agree... Flexi is not my choice.This thread will cause arguments and probably get 60+ replies to it. Adobe used to be the software of choice, because before Corel X3, Corel was crap. Once X4 hit, it was a complete game changer. Now with X8 it's an industry leader and Corel is built more for signage now than an art program. There are die hard Adobe lovers who went to school for it or grew up with it. There is still a place for Adobe, if you want something amazing with millions of effects, it's great. But if you want cut vinyl, more simple stuff, things compatible with CNC's it's Corel hands down. Adobe takes way more training to use and is a graphics program, where Corel is more simple and straight to the point. So again both have their place, but I prefer Corel because I am not a graphic artist and my stuff is not high end designs. It does everything I need it to.
A lot of people say "Corel can't do this, it can't do that" Well actually it usually can but they don't know how to do it or know it exists. I've recently found new things with Corel that I never thought was possible. Plus with the dozens of add ons, it really amps it up.
But for Flexi, in my opinion that is an overrated piece of crap, it's expensive and not great at all.
I have never experienced a memory issue with Corel....you can almost work full scale and have no hang time or memory issues. You can also print from Corel without use of a Rip program, unlike Illustrator.
As a designer, I feel this is not true at all. Where Mac may seem better to one, it may not suite another. I personally spent over $2k on my computer a few years ago for my freelance work and would not have changed my mind. I am not a fan of Corel at all, but everyone is different and we all have our own ways. The only thing that should be looked at is the ending outcome of what is produced, not how it got to that point.Something I don't like about Adobe products (unless it has changed) is they are a closed system...
meaning, in Corel Draw you can modify almost anything, short cut keys, tool bar, etc. but in Illustrator,
they decide what you have to use...
Also, I have run across too many douche bag "designers" (nobody here) who think that if you use
Corel Draw and/or use a PC instead of a Mac then you can't be a real designer..
As a designer, I feel...
That's why I was careful to add "not anyone here". I have dealt with designers in the past, with large advertising firms, thatAs a designer, I feel this is not true at all. Where Mac may seem better to one, it may not suite another. I personally spent over $2k on my computer a few years ago for my freelance work and would not have changed my mind. I am not a fan of Corel at all, but everyone is different and we all have our own ways. The only thing that should be looked at is the ending outcome of what is produced, not how it got to that point.
I have both. I own Corel outright.
Adobe I must continue to pay until I die.
Well technically just a different license schema not actual ownership, however, since Corel seems to want to be going to a yearly release schedule, I have to wonder if that too will change. But that's speculation on my part.
Between this and how MS is handling Win 10 pushed me over the edge to VM Windows and run Linux on bare metal. Not going to be ideal for everyone, but since most of my customer supplied files are either PDFs (at best) or raster files (doesn't matter if I get a raster or vector file, my process is the same), so I don't have to worry about being current. Even if I do, plenty of built in viewing tools on the Linux side to get it to work and bring into the VM.
Not really sure what you're talking about with Win 10...are you referring to a subscription model for the office products? I
I use opensource software, free, such as OpenOffice to read word or excel files. Do not know what they have for Window users since I am on a Mac.
Tried Libre years ago and it was just the same to me.