Save as CMYK TIFF might be nice. But I can do that EASY in Photoshop. That exposes quite a problem.
I think real pressure is building against companies like Scanvec/Amiable, Gerber and others who have traditionally made "CAS" type applications over the last 15-20 years.
The pressure that is building is for those specialized, and very expensive, applications to justify their purchase price and outright existence.
I remember a decade ago getting into a slight argument with one of the prominent editors of Sign of the Times Magazine at a large format printing seminar held at an ISA show in Las Vegas. He was talking about the need for shops to buy all sorts of specialized software being sold by Gerber and others. I simply asked, "how are these applications any better than Adobe Photoshop?" He seemed a little put off, responding, "how long has Adobe being creating graphics software?" My shot back was, "Adobe has put down the cornerstones for everyone else with technologies like Photoshop and Postscript." I wanted to throw in a "DUH!!" in there but thought that would be a little too rude.
The combination of Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator and a good page layout application like InDesign or QuarkXpress is more than enough for many to put together all the creative work on a large format or giant format design.
The creative tools in other vector drawing programs like CorelDRAW are every bit as mature as the drawing tools in Flexi or Gerber's apps. In some cases they're even more mature. I've been doing a lot of my electrical sign design work pretty much all within mainstream applications like CorelDRAW, Freehand and Illustrator rather than using the "CAS" type apps just from the simple standpoint of avoiding BUGS.
I'll give you an example. How many folks in this forum used CASmate a lot? As powerful as it was in some respects, it really sucked in others. If I had a series of long rectangles used as ruling lines and wanted to weld them into another object, I would always run into trouble. The long rectangles would lose a point on the lower right end and turn into long triangles. The code modules in the program really really sucked in their floating point function. Some welding actions would send CASmate careening into a destructive "infinite undo" lapse, where it would keep undo-ing everything in the drawing until there were no objects left to undo. I am NOT making that up. Other times you might just get hit with the drastic Windows white box of death message: "floating point: square root of negative number." That means save if you can and reboot immediately. I would try doing the same design functions in CorelDRAW. Lo and behold, every welding attempt was fully successful. Even with the drawing board expanded to full scale and welding objects hundreds of inches in length.
Mainstream graphics applications like IllustratorCS2 and CorelDRAW X3 are now more powerful than ever. Their creative capability far outstrips that of just about any CAS-type application in existence.
Obviously that leaves behind the one thing the CAS-type applications have some focus: cutting vinyl, preparing G-code files for CNC routing and software-based RIP functions for large format printing. Actually, that's the area where companies like Scanvec-Amiable and Gerber are going to make their last stands on relevance. Either they need to do more to specialize those functions, make them a lot more powerful and productive -and maybe more affordable- otherwise they're going to get put under.
How hard would it be for Adobe or Corel to put together a large format printer software RIP? It would be pretty easy for Adobe, considering these are the guys who own the Postscript standard as well as PDF. It wouldn't be hard for either to put together a vinyl cutter front end either.
The way I see it both Scanvec-Amiable and Gerber have huge bullseyes painted on their backs. Both Adobe and Corel have rifles at the ready.
Wow. Long post. Felt like ranting. Felt good. Hehe.