That is what we in the publishing biz refer to as “totally insane.” HubrisĪnecdotal evidence is not the best way to objectively study anything, but ask anyone what caused them to leave XPress for InDesign. But things swiftly changed, and by 2004, Quark’s market share reportedly declined to 25 percent. We didn't immediately notice something that had as good a chance at taking over our honed workflow as did a reversion to Letraset. Most of us were too busy using XPress in hardened, well-established production routines under tight deadlines. To say that InDesign made a splash would be optimistic. ![]() That was the year that Adobe’s InDesign 1.0 hit the market. But when I left Vice in ’99, the privately held Quark Inc.’s best days were behind them. The widely reported statistics were that XPress enjoyed 95 percent dominance of the publishing market at that time. When I eventually got summer jobs in DTP service bureaus and magazines, the dominance of QuarkXPress 3 was total. ![]() Sure, you might have heard the name Pagemaker by Aldus-later purchased by Adobe-but even with my little awareness of the publishing world outside our school walls, it was obvious that no one used it. Back then, when asked “what program do you learn for jobs in page layout and design," there was only one answer: QuarkXPress. I went to a high school for the arts-yes, it was just like Fame, so stop asking-and only got seriously into computers, Photoshop, and design in the early nineties. What did QuarkXPress do-or fail to do-that saw its complete dominance of desktop publishing wither in less than a decade? In short, it didn’t listen. In fact, the story reads like the fall of any empire: failed battles, growing discontent among the overtaxed masses, hungry and energized foes, hubris, greed, and. Quark's demise is truly the stuff of legend. In fact, it was publishing. But its hurried and steady decline is one of the greatest business failures in modern tech. ![]() As the big dog of desktop publishing in the '80s and '90s, QuarkXPress was synonymous with professional publishing.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |