Macaw 1 0 8 – Code Savvy Web Design Tool

broken image


Macaw – Code-savvy web design tool (macaw.co) 147 points by ApertureHour on Oct 19, 2013 hide past web favorite 52 comments: selmnoo on Oct 19, 2013. Macaw 1 0 11 – Code Savvy Web Design Tool Reduce Image Size Mac Djvu Reader Pro 2 3 9 Iso Path Finder 9 0 8 Meters Update Your Mac Operating System Tag 1 0 3. Macaw 1 5 10 – code savvy web design tool. Apeaksoft blu ray player 1 1 8. Grids for Instagram 6.1.4 Crack x86-x64 Grids for Instagram brings the best pro Instagram experience to your windows, with Stories Grids is the first and only app that supports stories!, Direct Message and Large/Fullscreen photo and video viewing.now with the ability. In fact, the total size of Forum.macaw.co main page is 348.6 kB. This result falls beyond the top 1M of websites and identifies a large and not optimized web page that may take ages to load. 15% of websites need less resources to load.


I wish I would have backed this project in time. It looks super interesting and potentially disruptive to Adobe. Do you think Macaw could be a potential threat to Photoshop or Fireworks? Adobe needs a viable competitor built for web design.

Check out Macaw

  • New in WebSite X5 Go 2020.1.4.0: Every new version of WebSite X5 we release is exciting: after working on an important project for many months, it feels great to publish it and start seeing people.
  • Create standard, bootstrap, and W3 HTML forms to integrate in your web design project without too. Sep 27th 2020, 14:30 GMT Windows 10 64 bit / Windows 10 / Windows 8 64 bit / Windows 8.
  • The code-savvy web design tool. Macaw How-To Videos. Sign up for Macaw news and updates: sign up.

The code-savvy web design tool. Macaw Sneak Peek. Intro 0:00; Hybrid app 0:23; Fluid canvas and grid 0:38; Library assets 0:54; Drawing 1:19.

Check out https://webflow.com/ it has a lot of the same features of Macaw and it's available now.

Also Adobe already killed Fireworks, however it does remind me of Adobe's Edge Reflow.

I didn't know that. I only use Photoshop and Pixelmator. Thanks for the link to Webflow. I'll have to take a look.

Adobe might save itself with it's new pricing model. However, they still have to protect a $27.3B market cap. The problem with Adobe (specifically Photoshop) is their price points were so high, most people starting off were forced to pirate the software. It feels like things are starting to change both on product and pricing. It's almost certainly as a result of growing competition.

> The problem with Adobe (specifically Photoshop) is their price points were so high, most people starting off were forced to pirate the software.

Adobe is a company in the business of making software for design professionals not hobbyists it's priced according to the value it has for those professionals given the prices professional command for their services. If you are being paid for your design work then you shouldn't be stealing. If you aren't being paid then you don't need professional tools yet you can cut your teeth on graphic tools designed for hobbyists. Widespread pirating of commercial software is largely about public perception of a company people feel it's ok to steal software they don't actually like.

To be honest James, I think you're getting a little too defensive and misunderstanding what I was saying. I have never pirated Adobe software and I'm not advocating for doing so. I understand Adobe products are built for design professionals, but as with any creative professional, not everyone starts out with hundreds of dollars to spend on industry standard software. It's incredibly important for there to be options for everyone to start designing no matter what their budget. I'm also speaking in the past tense, I think Adobe's new model of charging less upfront and paying monthly makes their software much more accessible to the average designer.

There is no reason to be condescending. Typeface 2 6 4 2006 torrent. Not only have I never pirated Adobe software, I've been a paid user since 2005. While you and I are both in the fortunate position to be able to afford industry-standard software. Not everyone is so fortunate. The good news is, competition is growing and Adobe is changing for the better.

James I see you helping out a lot around the forums. You give really good advice most of the time. I really don't want to sound disrespectful. Have a good day!

Macaw 1 0 6 – Code Savvy Web Design Tool Free

I didn't mean to imply you personally ever used pirated software as your post in no way implied that. The you I used was the generic you in lieu of the term one.

Sorry for any misunderstanding.

Ben Ackles -

I just came across a very interesting article about piracy of Android apps. It offers some very interesting context on software piracy in general. I think this is my favorite quote.

'Piracy is a symptom of failure to find an effective business model. 'Effective' here means the whole gamut of product quality, availability, platform, marketing, price, delivery, support and so on.'

I think that's an excellent analysis, so by extension Adobe's business model in particular it's pricing/delivery of Photoshop has failed and resulted in piracy. https://hkxl.over-blog.com/2021/01/ethernet-driver-for-mac-os-high-sierra.html.

Tweetbot 2 0 4 – popular twitter client. That's an interesting quote. It seems to really capture the variety of motives behind piracy. It's not quite as simple as people being cheap, resentful and entitled.

Used webflow, it's nice but the monthly price and some of the crashes were off putting. Love the idea of working offline for a one time payment. Adobe and webflow are a continuous investment while macaw is trying to reach every potential Web designer in the market.

It's available pre-order to general public for $129: http://macaw.co/presale/.

Once it's released to the general public, I'm hoping to get some first hand accounts from some experienced designers about how well it does the job day-to-day.

I donated around november to their kickstarter.

Hoping it's as awesome as it looks!

Downloading the free trial right now :)

Do not waste your time with Macaw! It does not work at all. The software breaks and is a waste of time.

When will overwatch come to mac. Yeah it is and it really bugs the crap outta me! It's been a huge disappointment so far. Thankfully I didn't buy it!

Posting to the forum is only allowed for members with active accounts.
Please sign in or sign up to post.

19 Jun 2014

Update: Macaw has just launched version 1.5 and these are some of the new features:

States

Quickly add hover, active and focus states for any element.

Seriously? In 1.5? This should have been part of 1.0!

Display Toggling

Take control of an element's display and visibility properties for smart, responsive design.

Once again, a 1.0 feature that was actually demoed in one of their videos but never worked.

Macaw 1 0 8 – code savvy web design tool windows 10

Rich Text

Create and style nodes for total control of your text.

Yeah, the lack of text options was painful. Also a 1.0 feature.

Maybe 1.5 is the new 1.0?

I wrote this in another blog post but decided to give it its own page after downloading the latest version, 1.0.12 and trying to use it once again. I figured, maybe now it's matured enough where it's actually useful. I needn't have bothered, it just hung on me while trying to paste some lorem ipsum text from the internet (I couldn't remember the way to use the built-in generator). So it seems it's still useless.

This is by far the worst offender of all the Kickstarter projects I've backed.

Macaw was supposed to be the next great thing in web design, it promised to be the Photoshop of web design, the holy grail of web design, a WYSIWYG tool that actually worked, that wrote correct code and respected web standards and that allowed you to create a web site completely in a visual form; no code writing, no fighting with any CSS styles or javascript.It sounded too good to be true. I should have known. When things sound too good to be true they usually are and Macaw is no exception, in fact it's pretty useless.

That's a pretty strong word to use for a new piece of software: useless, especially one that the developers have, apparently, worked so hard on. Let me explain.

I was really excited about Macaw, I've been making websites on and off for about 17 years, since 1997 more or less when I created my first website with a text editor of some kind. In those 17 years I have not found a really decent WYSIWYG web editor that would actually work as advertised. Back in the old days there was Go Live before Adobe bought it and, like everything Adobe touched after 2001, ruined it, turned it to shit. I can't remember the name of the company but I bought a copy of this out of my own pocket (the company I was working for wouldn't pay for it, even though I'd promised to build their website for them which wasn't even in my job description, cheap bastards) and used it extensively, even to make the website for the cheap bastards I was working for at the time, it was great, not the holy grail of web editors but pretty close. Then, as I say, Adobe bought it and ruined it. So I turned to Macromedia Dreamweaver, once again, before Adobe bought it and, you guessed it, turned it to shit.

By the way, how was it possible for Adobe to buy their only competitor, Macromedia, and then destroy its apps? In a country where monopoly is supposed to be illegal, how was that possible?

Politics aside, Dreamweaver was destroyed by Adobe, they still sell it but it's an overpriced piece of shit. What's a web developer to do?

I tried everything else out there, from the Open Source Bluefish, Mozilla, Eclipse, Apatana, etc to the funkier apps like Rapidweaver and even Apple's short-lived iWeb thing (was it called iWeb? I can't remember). None of them were satisfactory. So it was with a heavy heart that I went back to coding everything by hand. This is a very tedious, sad and depressing thing to do. Sure you feel all powerful because you have full control of your code, nobody can sully your beautiful code with weird inline styles and other crap, I'm looking at you Dreamweaver, but it is repetitive, grinding work, especially when you have to write a fucking javascript mouseover effect for the 500th time!

So you can imagine how excited I was about Macaw, I gave my $99 bucks to them and waited. At first with bated breath, then with a little resignation.

Finally, version 0.6 was delivered to us Kickstarter backers, oh such joy. It wasn't bad, it was actually quite impressive. I mean it was very limited and half the stuff that was in there didn't work, but the promise of it was awesome. It wrote nice code, albeit funky, but nice code. But it wasn't all unicorns and rainbows, every element had its own styling, which is very heavy handed and a nightmare to maintain or edit, and positioning was either relative or absolute, it was full of bugs and crashed s lot, but hey, it's a 0.6 version, c'mon what do you expect?

Then version 0.7 came out, fixed some stuff, but still every element had its own style, still no real way to share styles between pages, still full of bugs, hmmm… but hey, 0.7 right? Not done yet, don't be so quick to judge.

0.8 fixed more stuff, still every element with its own style, no way to share styles between pages, bugs, uh… Ok, don't despair, let's wait for version 1.0 shall we?

0.9 changed a bunch of stuff which sounds good, right? 0.9, almost ready for prime time. But it changed things so much that you couldn't open any of your Macaw projects, you had to recreate them all from scratch! WTF? But hey, that's what you get for playing around with a non-release software right? They told you it was beta and subject to change so don't bitch too much.

Alright, so finally version 1.0 comes out and everyone is excited, I get an email saying to upgrade now, of course I'll upgrade now, what do you think I've been waiting all this time for? So I upgrade and… I can't even access the application. I mean, I'm locked out, can't use it. WTF? Turns out I have to update my Kickstarter license or some shit but there are no instructions anywhere on how to do it. I send an email to support and after about an hour of uncontrollable rage I give up and go to sleep.

Next day I get an email from the Macaw guys saying I should update my license, an email, by the way, that should have been sent before the one about upgrading, right? OK great, I can finally use the program I paid good money for. Click on the link, it says, and your license will be magically updated and everything will be right with the world, I click the link, no dice, I have to fill out a form, OK, fill out the form, it says my license has been updated, super. Go back to the program, nope, your password is incorrect. Shit. Try again, and again, and again. Nothing, no way to get into the fucking program at all. I can't even get the trial version working for fucks sakes!

So, more emails to Tech Support, no answers, can't get the damn thing to work. I give up again and go to sleep. Two days later, I get an email from support, nothing they suggest works. Finally at the end of the day we get the thing working. So after all this struggling I can use the software, finally, the coveted 1.0 version, this is going to be awesome.

I try to make a website, not even a website, a single web page with 2 links in the top and an image in the middle. Nothing could be simpler than this. It doesn't work. I create some text next to the right margin, Macaw says it's 20 pixels from the top, fine. I copy that text and create the second link right next to it about 30 pixels to its right. Weirdly, Macaw says this one is -33 pixels (that's negative 33 pixels) from the top, what the fuck? The baselines are aligned, how can one be 20 pixels from the top and the other one be -33 pixels? But who cares, right? It's a WYSIWYG, as long at the page looks good, who cares what the code turns out like? Well, I care, I want good code, not shitty code that is later going to come back and bite me in the arse. But right now, to get this far I've been fighting with it for about an hour so I don't care, I just want to be able to create this fucking web page. So I just ignore it and plunge ahead.

I add an image to the middle of the page and the rightmost link, the one that was -33 pixels from the top jumps out of its container and lands a bunch of pixels below where it used to be and now says its -77 pixels from the top. I never touched the bastard, was nowhere near it, all I did was add an image to the middle. I move it back up with the mouse and it jumps back down, over and over again. Then I try moving it with the cursor keys, hey, great it stays in its place. Alright. Let me add some text to the bottom of the page. Boom, the fucker jumps down again, bastard!

Long story short, after another 40 minutes of fighting with the program I cannot get the link to stay where it needs to, it's just not possible.

Macaw 1 0 8 – Code Savvy Web Design Tool Windows 10

I finally give up on Macaw, once again, and do it all from scratch by hand. It takes me 10 minutes to create that web page by hand-coding everything. It took me almost 2 hours fighting with Macaw and I was not able to make it work. Oh, and did I mention that version 1.0doesn't even have a manual of any type? All it has are some videos on the Macaw website, most of which apply to pre 1.0 versions where things were quite different so are not much use.

So, yeah, overall not great. I wouldn't say it's disappointing, I'd say it's useless. If I can't use the program to create a simple website then guess what? It's useless.

Maybe in another year it will be somewhat useful, for now it's a waste of time and money.

Share this post if you want,or follow me on Twitter if you're into that stuff.
Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.comments powered by Disqus

Macaw 1 0 8 – Code Savvy Web Design Tool Software

Related Posts





broken image