WildWestDesigns
Active Member
I've been with my sign company since 1993.
Approx. 1 year over me (depends on when in '93 you started).
I wouldnt upgrade to 10, who said you had to? We use Flexi and adobe illustrator both still on disks
Eventually one will have to, unless wanting to get into the realm of keeping and maintaining legacy hardware or VMing exclusively legacy software.
If there is one to one feature and workflow parity, there is still going to be an issue. Especially if one started off on one software and just working on other. One software may have said feature, but implemented in a different way. Pen tool and node manipulation in Draw, if I remember correctly, had an extra step with how I used it versus doing the same thing in Ai.
Extra steps of point and clicking in Draw was mentioned, I remember one conversation that I had with Old Paint before he passed, he complained about that very thing in Ai. Except I think it was menus buried within menus and couldn't get key bindings to them. I told him about Actions (which still has it's limitations as to what you can "record" on them), but he couldn't find Actions. Turns out the last copy of Ai he had (or at least one that he could readily install) was Ai7. I can't remember for sure that far back, but I don't think Actions was around then. I seem to only recall them in the CS suites. Before I had switched platforms, I was looking at 3rd party solutions to see if there was a way to add keybindings or macros to say something like the Xkeys that wasn't there from within the program itself. I never got past the original initial research into it as I switched platforms and it already had that built in functionality in there (and even able to have those work going into a VM as well for individual programs in the VM (for my Wacom Cintiq that came in very handy)).
I think no matter what the software company does, it's damned if they do, damned if they don't. If feature and workflow is exactly one to one, then your going to have comparisons between how snappy they are, how quickly rendered etc. They might be snappy with one feature, but not as snappy with the other. Of course, that's not nearly as bad if they have the same feature, but different workflow to it.
Of course, then the wrench in the whole thing is that even if you do go to one program to the next and the next program has a different workflow, for some it may actually be more logical, intuitive whatever, but may not be for the next person.
Pick the one that works for you in all the necessary situations (and yes, I'm including what clients send you) and roll with it.