1. Home
  2. Computing & Technology
  3. Desktop Publishing

Adobe PageMaker

By Jacci Howard Bear, About.com

Description: Not quite on a par with InDesign or QuarkXPress, Adobe PageMaker is still a professional-level page layout application. Marketed as a small business/enterprise publishing solution, PageMaker outshines the similarly-targeted Microsoft Office Publisher in output but not in price or ease of use.
Overview: Once the darling of high-end work, Adobe PageMaker now targets business users. With features for non-designers, including templates and clip art, it still retains its pro-level attributes. Version 7 adds merge, PDF import/export, native Photoshop and Illustrator format support, and a converter for some QuarkXPress and Publisher files. Type controls and layout options make it a designer's tool. Improved Word support and data merge features increase its usefulness for small business users.
Not as inexpensive or easy-to-use as Microsoft Publisher and missing the newest "must-have" features of InDesign and QuarkXPress, PageMaker is somewhere in the middle - a capable program for general desktop publishing tasks for individuals and small to mid-size businesses requiring a product with widespread industry support and high-end capabilities. Despite its marketing focus, it is still a viable option for freelance desktop publishing.
Alternatives: If staying in the Adobe family is paramount, then InDesign is the best alternative. Less expensive alternatives are Microsoft Publisher and Serif PagePlus.
History: In 1985 Aldus developed PageMaker for the Mac, the first "desktop publishing" application. The Windows version followed in 1987. Later acquired by Adobe, until the introduction of Adobe InDesign it reigned as the favorite high-end alternative to QuarkXPress. Adobe versions begin with 5 and 6 (earlier versions were Aldus). Versions 6.5 and 6.5 Plus differed in that the Plus marked the beginning of the marketing transition to a business application and included business-oriented templates and clip art not bundled with earlier versions. Version 7 added additional features important to business use such as the PDF import/export and merge options. Differences between the PC and Mac versions became less pronounced with more recent upgrades.

Explore Desktop Publishing

More from About.com

  1. Home
  2. Computing & Technology
  3. Desktop Publishing
  4. Do Page Layout & DTP
  5. Design Projects & Ideas
  6. Newsletters
  7. Newsletter Software
  8. Adobe PageMaker - Desktop Publishing Software Profile - Adobe PageMaker

©2008 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company.

All rights reserved.