12/8/2023 0 Comments Apple iwork pages![]() Proper planning must be used when creating documents with page bleed that have facing pages to prevent problems at the center where these facing pages meet. Obviously this might cause problems if your project involves multiple facing pages. 125" on all four sides) and make the bleed part of the actual page. There are however a number of things to watch out for and remember when submitting your files for printing.īleed - Pages has no direct support for page bleed and if your project requires items to bleed off the edge of the page then you must create your document oversized (by at least. We can only support printing from PDF files exported from Pages (see notes below). People will either stick with PCs, go for an iMac or skrimp up for a Mac Pro.Īpple are only one manufacturer of many in the computing space.While not intended as professional level page layout program it, is possible to create printable page layouts in Apple Pages page layout software. Honestly, I don’t think it’s in Apple’s interest to cater to a market that can’t appreciate what Apple offers. And with Intel chips, they shall cry “it’s just a PC”. If anything, an Apple midi system would only fan the flames of all the people who claim that Apple machines are overpriced when compared part for part. A Mac midi system is simply not going to be as cheap as a Dell when you factor in a better designed case, the Apple badge and Operating System, and the fact that some idiot can price all their parts seperately and proclaim cheapness that way. Midi systems from other manufacturers are going to be around iMac prices. If Apple introudce a midi tower, they’re going to have difficulty pricing it right. A marvelous piece of hardware, but way overpriced and beset with problems. But remember the last time Apple introduced an in-between product? The G4 Cube. TimeMachine especially.Īpple have yet to announce new hardware so we can hope. Also looking forward to new features in 10.5…. I’d like to see Pages have OpenOffice file compatability. It does make a nice low-cost alternative to Word. Pages runs too slow on my system and doesn’t have a lot of features that Word does. I hope iWork 07 proves to be a huge improvement. They’ve paid too much attention IMO to the lower margin Mac mini, and alienated the rest of its clientele looking for the middle ground. The lack of one leaves a huge price gap in such a system between the MacPro and the iMac. The space saved on the “desktop” profile is lost with having to add enclosures for a better DVD-burner and a two-drive firewire enclosure.Īpple should introduce such a system: expandable and upgradable, single CPU in a desktop case. I regret in a way buying the iMac because it lacks upgradability and expandability internally. I am an owner of an iMac G5 now for 2 years and am saving for a replacement Mac. □ (But also more reliable than the Intel MacBooks my friends have purchased. It’s been very reliable, blowing away the two Dell notebooks I owned (both of which died) during the same time period. But I’m concerned about the level of testing that’s gone into these products.Īny word on the “super-secret features” that Jobs spoke of at the WWDC a few months ago? If they’re compelling enough I’ll go ahead and trade up to an Intel Mac for now, I’ve been content with my 4-year old trusty PowerBook G4. Then agan, maybe they are just that good (though iTunes 7 shows otherwise).Ĭan I assume there was at least a private beta of some sort? I do know that Apple did do their usual developer’s preview so at least third party devs could report any bugs that they found. I get the feeling that Apple believes its own press clippings that their developers are God’s gift to programming, and therefore require no public betas. The notion of development “wrapping up faster than many at Apple even anticipated” with no public beta is worrisome. Regarding 10.5, iLife ’07, and iWork ’07, was there a public beta of these? iTunes 7 was released in a very buggy state (requiring iTunes 7.01 to be released within the first week, and it’s still buggy), partly because there was no public beta. (I don’t plan on updating my OSX version until getting a new Mac altogether, making the jump to intel.) I’m still on Panther (10.3), so I won’t be seeing any new bug fixes or security updates. Sadly, this will also mark the end of support for OSX 10.3, if Apple continues their history of supporting only the two most recent 0.1 OSX releases at any given time.
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