If you do a lot of masking in Photo, then try the AFP 1.7 beta. It has fixed many of the problems with earlier versions. It’s also faster, though is probably slowed by debugging code. Stability is reasonable … though it’s good to have the Cmd-S habit frequently clicking away.
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On 6 May 2019, 8:34 pm, Cooner wrote:
third-party desktop publishing apps of professional quality are still few and far between.
I know this sounds really silly … but if you’re needs are not high-end, then Pages has slowly, very slowly crept back up to being a pretty good app with both its page-layout and WP modes. It now has master pages and personally, I use it for printing images up to poster size. It’s so easy … if you know how to workaround some of Apple’s hidden stuff. For example, it used to be impossible to get images into it, without them being converted to sRGB png. Then without any info whatsoever from Apple, it was able to use tiffs in any colour space. Huh?? I stumbled across this and it has since been my printing tool of choice. Very easy to be very precise with position and of course, you can just save your documents for future use, which is not something you can do in normal photo apps… It’s so typical of Apple.
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On 11 May 2019, 10:20 am, Richard van Heukelum wrote:
On 7 May 2019, 8:45 pm, Baron Munchausen wrote:
It is still the best WYSIWG website editor.
It’s definitely not, but it comes close.
I leave the finer points of software merits to you experts. Many of us (I’m one such) are pretty low-tech in such things as coding, web design, etc. For me, since 2004 Freeway has provided a very user-friendly way to build a website that now reaches about 40K visitors monthly. Freeway’s ease-of-use, along with much advice on this forum from you internet friends, is allowing many of us nonprofessionals to be “webmasters” without having our own high-tech expertise.
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Belight Software has recently come out with a vector design tool. https://amadine.com/ $19.99. Definitely worth a try. I’ve used quite a few of the products and they are first rate. Something to learn while we wait for Freeway to come back. I have been using RocketCake for websites for a while and it’s working pretty well, but I’ll be happy to return to Freeway once it’s ready.
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To make sure I understand the right thing to do before Fwy 8 arrives — we must stay with OS 10.14 Mojave (or earlier) until Fwy 8 is available, is that right?
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To make sure I understand the right thing to do before Fwy 8 arrives – we must stay with OS 10.14 Mojave (or earlier) until Fwy 8 is available, is that right?
Yes. Or at least have a separate disk or partition with Mojave installed so you can boot into that to use Freeway 7 and earlier. If you want to run Freeway 8 and 7 at the same time to compare how it handles things, that will need to be Mojave or earlier as well.
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The current version of Freeway will not run in macOS 10.15.
We are rewriting Freeway as a 64-bit application - but because Apple have abandoned the 32-bit (Carbon) APIs that Freeway uses (instead of providing 64-bit replacements) we are rewriting it from scratch. This is a major task, even compared with previous transitions - such as the transition to from OS 9 to OS X, or the transition from PowerPC to Intel.
We are planning to release a public beta later this year, but it will take longer than that before the new version replicates all of Freeway’s current functionality and is able to read existing Freeway files.
Our advice is to keep an old system running macOS 10.14 (or earlier) for a transitional period, until you no longer need to run the current version of Freeway. This could be a virtual system (using Parallels or VMWare etc.) or it could be a separate disk or partition.
Our goal is to provide a complete replacement for the current version of Freeway - but it will take us a while to get there.
Jeremy
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Hearing ‘High Sierra’ possibility is a big relief. I thought you were starting with Mojave, and that would leave me in the dust. I am not able to plan any major hardware update in the near/not so near future.
Frank Harshbarger
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On Jun 6, 2019, at 4:25 AM, Jeremy Hughes email@hidden wrote:
Elaborating on what Joe said: the next version of Freeway will run in Mojave (and probably also in High Sierra) as well as in Catalina.
Hi, DB just converting freeway which is being written in swift (latest apple language) from Carbon (there is no 64-bit version) is a massive undertaking… basically you have to rewrite all the code again and that is an enormous effort!! To say its time consuming is a HUGE understatement. I will be shocked and surprised if the first version of the new Freeway 8 or Phenix 1 or whatever it will be called has anywhere near the number of controls as the original in its initial release. So even if it’s close to the original, then I would be over the moon. But the good news to all those wondering if this is even possible. Well, Softpress has had to rewrite a lot of the application before, and this was when Apple went from the old classic system & power pc based programs to the newer OSX operating systems. So if anyone can do it… I am confident they can
all the best Max
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Interesting to hear FWP7 running in Mojave - I just got a 2019 iMac and it’s failing to run.
I would gladly boot to a Chronosync bootable backup running Sierra - but it’s unsupported on the new Mac. I’ve been considering getting a Mac Mini to cover the legacy programs I’ve lost (in particular FW) but you’re saying FW should work?
I might need to find the DMG installer and reinstall then?
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