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Adobe design
Adobe design







adobe design adobe design

well, should be more aware of their limitations. At best, most of it is outdated at worst, it's overrun by one-trick 'experts' who. Īs you might have begun to grasp, I have a very low opinion of the bulk of the e-book/EPUB 'expertise' out there on the web. You can find it and much support information at. It's quite dense but not difficult to follow: the actual EPUB standard is the best 'book' there is. See also every argument by amateurs about how Adobe stuff is "too expensive." )

adobe design

It's the amateur and office-worker tools that tend to be "free" or "cheap" and then ring in licensing issues for things like commercial reproduction. Creating stuff, on a commercial basis, is what they're for. (Which is all as it should be: InDesign and the rest of the suite are top-level professional tools. If you're doing Hollywood productions or international digital magazines, there are some caveats and sub-clauses that might come into play, but in general, at the freelance and small agency level: if you create it, it's yours. What you can't do is give away any part of the software (you can't give someone Acrobat DC to view and print files, for example - not that that's doable anyway), or the stock material in and of itself, or the fonts. The only areas that have some further restrictions are use of Adobe Fonts and stock images, and when those are fully embedded in PDF, EPUB or print form, they are also licensed for any purpose you put them to. As long as you have any license to use the software at all, anything you produce with it is your property, to sell, give away or distribute as you choose.









Adobe design