InDesign CS5.5 works in concert with Adobe’s Digital Publishing Suite, which supports creation, publication, sale, and analysis of content on a range of tablets, including Apple’s iPad. Documents can include video, audio, panoramic views, 360-degree object rotation, image pan and zoom, integration of HTML and HTML 5 content, and more. Integrated into InDesign CS5.5 is the new Folio Producer that publishers can use to enhance tablet-based designs with rich media and interactivity for producing digital magazines, newspapers, corporate publications, e-books, and advertising. A new version of the Design Standard suite (which includes Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and Acrobat) will also be available. The new Creative Suite 5.5 Design Premium package offers new versions of InDesign, Dreamweaver, Flash Professional, and Flash Catalyst, along with current versions of Acrobat X Pro, Illustrator, Photoshop Extended, and Fireworks. “We believe that adding mid-cycle releases in between our milestone releases, which will now happen every two years, will help our customers keep ahead of the market trends.” Design Premium “We decided to change our Creative Suite release schedules, starting with CS5.5, to help our customers overcome the challenges they’ve been having with the wave of new mobile devices coming to market,” Dave Burkett, vice president and general manager of Adobe Creative Suite, told Macworld. Subscription pricing is also available for the following individual applications: After Effects, Dreamweaver, Flash Professional, Illustrator, InDesign, Photoshop, Photoshop Extended, and Premiere Pro. The complete mid-cycle lineup now features Creative Suite 5.5 Master Collection, Creative Suite 5.5 Design Premium, Creative Suite 5.5 Web Premium, Creative Suite 5.5 Production Premium, and Creative Suite 5.5 Design Standard.
ADOBE CREATIVE SUITE 5.5 STUDENT VERSION SOFTWARE
With the new schedule comes a new pricing plan: Adobe’s new Subscription Editions program is designed to make its creative tools more affordable to the artists and designers who need them and to give new users-and those who need the software only for specific projects-more opportunities to work with the apps. The proliferation of mobile apps, browser content, and digital magazines has inspired the company’s accelerated concentration on HTML 5, video, mobile, and digital publishing tools. This is in response to the transition away from paper-based publications to editorial and artistic content that is created and consumed on electronic devices such as smart phones and tablets. The new versions of Adobe’s creative programs, which will ship within 30 days, reflect the full-scale integration of tablet authoring into the creative workflow.