Posts Tagged ‘training’

Prepress In The Digital Age

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Enjoy a great article written by John Giles in the October issue of “Quick Printing Magazine.

“Everyone says they are different. Their shop is different. Their market is different. Their customers are different. Yet as I visit and chat with hundreds of printers throughout North America each year, it quickly comes evident that there are more similarities than differences…”

Read more

Markzware joins Blip.tv

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

Markzware on Blip.tv

Markzware is constantly looking for new ways to communicate and share the features and benefits of our conversion and preflight products. To this ends, we have joined a new and very exciting video site called Blip.tv. Here is what they call the embedded Markzware player below. Just click on it and watch!

The direct link to the Markzware Show channel on Blip.TV is http://markzware.blip.tv/. Enjoy the hopefully informative and educational videos and feel free to share with your co-workers and customers, for a well-made (preflighted) print-job is worth it’s weight in gold!

Preflighting A Win-Win For Both Printer And Print Buyer

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Never before has the world of graphic arts been so dynamic, so ripe with change and new opportunities afforded by emerging creative technologies. And no longer are the creations made in popular desktop programs - like QuarkXPress, Adobe InDesign or Microsoft Word - bound to the traditional constraints of print. These days, businesses create content for any number of purposes.

What Is A Preflight Check?

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

preflight: quality check your files

What is a preflight quality check?

It is a final look through all your production files in order to do a last quality check before they leave your building. This not only saves time as it hopefully eliminates many common project-delaying errors, but it also saves money as a final quality and content check ensures all the client’s colours are correct and all the project specifications are adhered to.

I have always felt it is best to have someone other than the production artist look over the files as a fresh set of eyes is more likely to catch potential problems.

ROROHIKO LTD. Teaches plug-in development at Adobe Summit in April

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

Getting started with Adobe InDesign Plug-Ins?

Is your team in need of more InDesign developers?

Want to be more efficient at developing InDesign Plug-Ins?

Getting up to speed with the InDesign SDK easily takes between two and six months of non-productive time.

Attending this one-day workshop will shave at the very least one month from this non-productive lead time.

No doubt you have a good idea what the cost of one developer-month is, so you can easily estimate what value this workshop is to you.


Markzware is Digg proof thanks to caching by WP Super Cache!