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000

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Posts posted by 000

  1. 3 hours ago, Ash said:

    To followup on some of my comments yesterday, we are today enshrining our commitment to the Affinity community in 4 pledges made by the Affinity and Canva teams.

    You can read about them here.

    We do truly believe the coming together of Affinity and Canva is only going to be a good thing for our customers, staff and the development of our apps. We very much hope you will all continue to be with us on this journey.

    All the best,

    Ash

    image.png

     

    A "Pledge" ist not a promise and "we are committed to" is very different from "we are going to" -- sorry, but while this is a nice gesture, I've heard this noncommittal language way to often (in recent years even from our gouvernment with their listening, their commitments and the famous "five pledges") to believe any of it.

    As I have spend a good amount of time of learning Affinity and moving all my work to it I'll stick with it for the time being. Worst case is that my version 2.4 stays as it is and I'll use it until I don't find a computer that runs it anymore.

    Given that Serif just got handed a large sack of money, I won't do any free beta testing from now on though, and only install further updates if they have something I need rather than looking forward to playing with a new toy and being happy about everything I discover.

    The software has hopped from "a journey I enjoy being part of" to "a tool I use to earn a living". My feeling towards Serif has shifted from "fan" and "advocate" to "user" respectively "customer" with a simple business relationship that can be cancelled the moment "the product doesn't meet expectations".

  2. 2 minutes ago, TonyO said:

    I've spent some time reading the posts on this thread, and I simply can't agree with the majority of posts that are only worried about a change in pricing structure. 

    Tools cost money, I use Designer on iPad as my main illustration app and my side hustle is quite lucrative. I'm willing and able to pay to help along development of a tool that i use this much. I work to get paid, and so do developers.

    What has me spooked about this acquisition the potential loss of the community that has contributed to the shape of the suite as it is today. I've been on these forums for a decade at this point, many of my own suggestions have been implemented as features into the apps as well as many bugs and not-so-good changes to the apps being fixed, the Affinity suite has grown WITH us.

    Giant companies like Adobe simply do not listen to user input. Their user forums are full of bots or "employees" who simply copy paste answers from the website. Problems are never solved, bugs persist for months if they ever get fixed at all. 

    Canva isn't publicly traded, so I'm not scared of the age old killer of good companies (investors), but I'm definitely afraid of these forums becoming empty hallways where the input of your loyalest of fans falls on deaf ears. Large corporations often lose touch of what made them great at the start.

    Change is fine, but please don't outgrow us. 

     

    Canva is aiming to go public soon. And no, for me personally it is not about the price and the subscription, it's about the "soul" of the software that I use every day and the fact that it was (currently still is) to chat with the developers directly.

  3. I've seen this happening a few times before with other software companies and have already started looking for alternatives to Publisher. Not going to switch immediately, but based on experience I know it's time to start evaluating other software as V2 is probably going to be last I have bought.

    Unfortunately, me switching software won't change anything: Everyone who currently works at Serif will have their retirement secured (congrats by the way, you deserve it!) and considering how many users Canva has, it doesn't make a difference to them if a few Affinity users jump ship.

    I'm only sad to see another company I really used to like and trust (trust that has been completely obliterated with just three simple lines of marketing hogwash) "go to the money". Surely it makes perfect sense financially, but morally and ethically it is just. not. OK.

    This is, however sad it may be, the world we live in and the world mankind has created for themselves. It's not about happy trusting users anymore, not about having a nice niche, but only about engagement, growth at all cost and a number at the bottom of the spreadsheet.

    To be honest: If I had the choice to cater to175 million non-pro users and buy my private island in the carribean or to cater to 3 million pro users who's trust I have, I don't know what I would do. I get the decision, but don't like it. At all.

    Gonna have a beer now, see what other software is available and probably delete my forum user account. Because ... well ... it's done. Serif has lost me as a "friend" and created a "faceless customer" that isn't loyal anymore but will vote with their wallet and go away as soon as things change too much in the wrong direction.

  4. Considering how many “funds” Canva has “raised” in the past few years and how many venture capital campanies are involved, I have a VERY bad feeling about this.

    The forced marketing speech (“joining the family”, yeah, sure) in the announcement doesn’t halp.

    I guess that it’s probably a good way for all Serif employees to get a nice retirement in 3 to 5 years, but it’s a buckshot in the face for me as a happy user and supporter of an independent company that makes professional software I use every day.

    1. Assign Keyboard Shortcut to Text Style
    2. Open Settings
    3. Assign same Shortcut to any feature
    4. No warning about shortcut already being used shown

    Result:

    • Shortcut for Text Style has higher priority
    • Shortcut does not work for feature when the same Shortcut is applied to a Text Style

    Possible Solution:

    • A warning could be shown in Text Style window, if a shortcut is already in use by the system (same as with shortcuts that are already in use for a different text style)
  5. Hi,

    I am currently working on an A4 sized document and the printer has gven me precise specifications on how the need the pages.

    They a very specific page size of 226.6 x 311.4 mm (total size including bleed and crop marks).

    The export with crop marks from Publisher is a bit larger, so I could crop it if I had Acrobat — ideally though, I would like to set this page size as export size so I don‘t have to edit the exported PDF. Any idea on how to set this up?

     

    P.S. — Please don‘t try to convince me that the page size doesn‘t matter as long as the content is centered and crop marks fit. The printer insists on getting pages of this exact size and there is nothing I can do about it.

  6. Thanks, I'll try the workaround, it ist going to be really cumbersome and super messy though: The document has currently 313 pages (yeah, I know, lucky number).

    I need to add about 45-50 empty pages (without masters applied) in different places and afterwards add special content on these pages. Then we're looking at roughly 150 pinned pictures inside the text (keeping the text flow intact obviously) and lastly applying different master pages to different sections / chapters.

    It worked fine in version 2.0 and 2.1. I am actually doing this very project every six months and never had any issues since I switched from InDesign to Publisher.

  7. - starting with a 312 page document, just text flowing in two columns

    - use "document -> add pages" to add two empty pages (no master page) at the beginning of the document

    Result:

    - the two empty pages are added

    - text disappears from all other pages (master page is still assigned)

    Expected result:

    - for the text to stay in the document

    System:

    macOS Sonoma (14.0)

    Affinity Publisher 2.2.1

  8. It's about 160 pages with about 60 different text styles and about 150 images.

    The "<>" that needs removing are leftovers from HTML commands that are spread throughout the text.

    As I haven't had any find-replace issues in the version 2.0 and 2.1 and fewer find-replace commands in 2.2 have worked fine, I'll update the post above as soon as I have found the cutoff point when it stops working.

    I remember InDesign having something similar a few years ago, find-replace stopped working in texts with more than 10.000 characters and it messed up the ,replace' part by adding the numer "1" to the replaced text after the limit was reached. Fun times. 🙂

    Update:
    Cutoff point seems to be somewhere about 1.500 results.

  9. I am having issues with find and replace of mor than 9.000 results of "<>" in my document.

    Publisher stops responding when clicking "replace all".

    Replacing them one-by-one works, so I'll manually replace a few hundred and try to find out where the line is where it crashes. Bit annoying, though ...

    9300 results -> stops responding, needs restart
    6800 results -> stops responding, needs restart
    5000 results -> stops responding, needs restart
    2500 results -> stops responding, needs restart

    Cutoff point seems to be somewhere about 1.500 results.

  10. I have noticed that whenever I place a PDF file, then use the properties bar to trim it to the TrimBox (or any other box) and finally apply text wrap, the text wrap always used the CropBox which means the textflow is too far away from the PDF and sometimes the columns left and right of the PDF are affected as well (depending on the Cropbox size).

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