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Adobe Illustrator 9.0: Win98/NT4/2K (discontinued)

Adobe Illustrator 9.0: Win98/NT4/2K

Entered CNET Catalog: 10/09/2001

SKU: 26000945

Manufacturer: Adobe Systems

Manufacturer description

Adobe Illustrator 9.0 software puts the power of editable vector graphics to work for the Web. Plus it expands your creative range and enhances your productivity with unlimited transparency capabilities, powerful object and layer effects, and other innovative features. And its tight integration with other Adobe software ensures a smooth, efficient workflow. Use the fast, flexible tools in Illustrator 9.0 to transform your creative ideas into sophisticated Web graphics, logo designs, type treatments, illustrations, packaging, presentations, technical drawings, and information graphics. Then showcase your graphics in print, on the Web, or in dynamic media with complete creative freedom.

CNET editors' review

  • Editors' Choice: No
  • Reviewed on: 04/24/2000
In both the beta and this final release, we noticed Illustrator 9.0's subtle rebranding of the signature Venus logo. The version 8.0 logo spoke to the print designer, with its manuscript lettering hiding behind the soft lines and chalk textures of Venus's illustrated face. Illustrator 9.0, with http:// and Web navigation icons placed over an even-skinned and vectorized Venus, announces itself as a Web designer's tool. While the interface remains familiar, the new features tighten the gap between Illustrator and Photoshop, make it easier to prepare graphics for Flash delivery, and offer extensive export capabilities.

In both the beta and this final release, we noticed Illustrator 9.0's subtle rebranding of the signature Venus logo. The version 8.0 logo spoke to the print designer, with its manuscript lettering hiding behind the soft lines and chalk textures of Venus's illustrated face. Illustrator 9.0, with http:// and Web navigation icons placed over an even-skinned and vectorized Venus, announces itself as a Web designer's tool. While the interface remains familiar, the new features tighten the gap between Illustrator and Photoshop, make it easier to prepare graphics for Flash delivery, and offer extensive export capabilities.

Illustrator 9.0 has everything a new release should: a familiar interface that won't disorient current users, coupled with a host of necessary new features that address the changing needs of the industry. Illustrator 9.0 is available for $399. Illustrator users can upgrade their software for $149, and if you're already using another Adobe graphics product or you're willing to switch from a competitor's product, Illustrator 9.0 can be yours for $249.

Web Creation Tools
Illustrator 9.0 comes with better image mapping capabilities, and like Photoshop, Illustrator now offers nondestructive drop shadows, feathering, and inner and outer glows for easier button creation. These Effect menu features allow you to build your buttons as live shapes. If you edit the text on a button, the button automatically resizes to match the length of the new text.

Pixels and Previews
Anyone who has used Illustrator to mock up a Web page has had to blindly estimate the conversion between pixels and points, picas, or inches. (How many Web designers even know what a pica is?) But in version 9.0 you can select pixels as a unit of measure. Choose the Pixel Preview command from the View menu and you can see how your vector artwork will render as rasterized artwork. You can even create and edit artwork in the Pixel Preview mode. Catching up to industry standards, Illustrator 9.0 also offers file optimization previews to help you find the perfect balance between image quality and file weight.

New Layers Palette
The new Layers palette makes managing objects easier than ever. Nest layers within layers for more logical file maintenance, or display all the child objects (such as text, graphics, and paths) of individual layers.

Transparency and Masking
You can now apply transparency to layers and objects. Choose from Normal, Multiply, Screen, and Overlay, and set the transparency percentage. New masking capabilities give you greater control over which parts of objects are visible. Apply the new Opacity Mask to an object and watch it peek out from behind another. Photoshop users will also recognize the lasso tool now added to the global task icon bar.

Integration
When opening a Photoshop file in Illustrator 9.0, you can now preserve masks, blending modes, and transparency, and convert layers to separate Illustrator objects. When exporting an Illustrator 9.0 file to Photoshop, you can preserve layers, opacity masks, transparency, blending modes, and editable type.

Flash Compatibility
Illustrator 9.0 offers new features that make it easier to create artwork for Flash. With the Release To Layers command in the Layers palette, you can automatically generate a separate layer for each object. You can then export the entire artwork as a single SWF file, export each layer to a separate frame in a single SWF file, or export each layer to a separate SWF file. This capability is a great advantage for Adobe users moving into Flash work.

Export Flexibility
Since Illustrator is now based on a PDF format, Acrobat 4.0 and higher will read AI files. You no longer have to export or save your Illustrator files as PDF files. In fact, you can move files from Illustrator 9.0 to Acrobat and back without compromising quality.

A less astonishing but equally useful addition is Illustrator's ability to let you export and save your files in virtually any format, including Illustrator, EPS, PDF, SWF, SVG, GIF, JPEG, PNG, Photoshop (including layers), BMP, PICT, PCX, PXR, TGA, and TIFF. It can read files saved in Illustrator (any version), EPS, PDF (one page at a time), Photoshop (versions 2.5 and later), SVG, Macromedia FreeHand (versions 5.0, 5.5, 7.0, and 8.0), CorelDraw (versions 5.0 through 8.0), BMP, GIF, JPEG, PNG, Kodak Photo CD, PICT, PCX, PXR, TGA, and TIFF formats.

Quirks
In spite of all the great new features, we found a few quirks in the interface. Many items in the Filter menu are duplicated in the Effects menu, creating a redundancy that could be easily eliminated by combining the two menus. We repeatedly noticed our cursor appearing as an hourglass icon even when no processes were running. We were also surprised and disappointed that such a robust application still won't let you underline text. Perhaps the next release will remedy this persistent oversight.

Illustrator's Save for Web dialog box lets you experiment with different formats and check download times at different modem speeds.

User opinions

Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

User Rating: 8/10

Tough but worth it!

Pros:

Cons:

Review: I'm taking an Illustrator class right now adn what I like about it is that it's closely related to Photoshop. I don't have to learn a whole bunch of stuff that's only useful for one particular program... Adobe often times transfers it's features to many of it's programs. It's fun to work with!

User Rating: 3/10

It's a great package to have if prestige is what you want.

Pros:

Cons:

Review: I started working with Adobe Graphic products and was heckled by a CorelDraw user for spending so much money for little in return. Other than to satisfy the printing industry, as a business owner, the bottom line is getting the job done for less money. Other Graphic products have been gaining ground. (Specifically CorelDraw Suites) It won't be long Adobe graphic products may become obsolete.

User Rating: 4/10

Slowwwww

Pros:

Cons:

Review: Just like Photoshop, avoid Illustrator like the plauge if your intention is to quickly do anything. I'm not a professional graphic artist, exactly...I'm responsible for web graphics and page design, photo re-touching, short-run printing, some original graphic design...you name it. I'm forced to use Illustrator to be as compatible as possible with artwork coming in from clients and other art professionals - if not for that fact, I'd never touch this resource-hogging, inefficient, expensive pig again. An AI file with one 150 dpi bitmap and about 10 vector layers brings my P4 1600Mhz with 256 mb ram to it's knees - Just like Photoshop does (god forbid you have them both open at the same time...30 seconds of swap file activity just to task switch). By the same token, I can have Paint Shop Pro (one of the most under-rated apps in existence) running with 2 or 3 300 dpi multi-layer images, and Frontpage, and CorelDraw, and IE, and Outlook express all at the same time with no swap file activity to speak of.I guess with a gig of RAM, it might be better. I mean, it takes Illustrator 15 or 20 seconds to load with no other apps running, or close to a minute to load if anything else at all is running. Let me put it another way. I love my new XP system. Everything snaps. Zip, zip, zoom. Right up until I load an Adobe product. Then I'm transported back to the days of trying to run any graphic app under Windows 95 with 16 megs of ram. The dominance of Illustrator in graphic arts reminds me of Wordperfect's dominance in PC word processing - long after simpler, more powerful, and much easier to use products were available - simply because they got there first. I should point out that AI is VERY powerful, in a myriad of ways. But unless you prepare artwork specifically for print for a living, it is one to avoid.

User Rating: 4/10

Don't Test Your Luck

Pros:

Cons:

Review: I had a choice between CorelDraw 10 or Adobe Illustrator 9.0 - I heard that Adobe was a more professional company, and went ahead getting the software expecting a wonderful program..WRONG! I've been doing web design for a long time, and i found Adobe way to confusing, and overpowering. It's too complicated, can't do EVERYTHING you want, and hogs every ounce of memory you want. They could get rid of their jobbled, still un-organized menu for something a bit more updated. It reminds me of the black and white mac interface. (The older version does more) CorelDraw 10 is a MUCH better choice. Easier to use, more options, MUCH faster. CorelDraw is great if your running a PC! I've heard of a waffle problem on the Mac's, and I'm no sure if it's for everyone.

User Rating: 7/10

i like it, period

Pros:

Cons:

Review: i enjoy studying this software despite what everyone else said. i dont find the interface hard to use, but i believe it can be done better.

User Rating: 6/10

As good as it gets for illustration

Pros:

Cons:

Review: I used to use CorelDRAW because it was easy to learn but it lacked the power that Illustrator has, especially for the web.

User Rating: 4/10

Unintuitive

Pros:

Cons:

Review: There's an old prejudice in the graphics industry: If a program is easy to use, then it is not powerful or unprofessional. On the other hand, if a program is complicated and takes time to learn, then it is a professonal tool... I personally believe this is nonsense. Illustrator falls within the second category. It has stabilished itseld as "industry standard" because of its early entrance in the MAC platform (as well as Photoshop) and now, it is the standard because graphics professionals are very conservative and not keen to new apps. However, there are other packages, such as CorelDraw 10, that offers every bit of power and much more flexibility for just a fraction of Adobe's price. Illustrator interface is annoyingly complicated. It has too many floating palettes occupying work space and it's increddibly slow, unless you have a super computer.

User Rating: 5/10

Good tools but horrible basic editing

Pros:

Cons:

Review: As a Freehand user I was forced to work with Illustrator in the office. Now is change alway hard, but Illustrator goes wrong with the very basics. Freehand 9 and 10 didn't live up to my expectations, but Freehand 8, no Freehand 5 is still better than Illustrator 9. Why? Adobe Photoshop and Pagemaker are legendary in using a very clear interface (I'm not talking about pallettes, but about the basic interaction with your objects). Illustrator adopted Photoshops interface but the program is so different. Illustrator is an object oriented program. I want to see all the properties of an object in one view (linetype, color, style, the-great-freehand-only-object-level-halftoning, overprint). In Photoshop this information is useless because its a bitmap program. Freehand gives you a clear overview of al the settings in one docker, and your able to alter every aspect directly (one-view text-attributes-editor, even easier and more powerfull than InDesign/Pagemaker/Word). The drawing of paths is also awkward in Illustrator. Snap only works on unlocked layers, and it connects new paths automatically to existing ones (but when you lock the layer, you can't snap). For editing curves you have 4 or 5 different tools, Freehand does all the editing with just one. Illustrator is always rewarded for its masking capabilities. Unbelievable!! I worked with Freehand 3 and it had a Paste inside and join paths commands. So ingineous and so simple. This command is used hundreds of times in any of my drawings. You never want anything else! Another - why I still hate Illustrator - fact is the pagehandling. Illustrator has only one page and you always work in relation to a printer. Freehand has a large pastboard and the possibility to use many pages in different formats (PDF import all pages!). Untill you print, you don't worry about margins etc. Last big complaint is on the redraw. Illustrator has pixel-preview and antialiasing, but the redraw of lines is (in all Adobe vector programs e.g. Acrobat) horrible. The lines and letters (when converted to paths) are always too heavy, and many thin lines close to eachother give cluttering. Only big magnifications give a good idea of what your work is going to look like. But a complete overwiew: it looks so bad! I admit I really miss the gradient meshes of Illustrator in Freehand, but with the Paste Inside function I paste in a nice mesh painted in the Photoshop. Illustrator users: surf to Macromedia and try their demo. Suffer a week or two, kick the habit of (mis)using all the funky effects in Illustrator and get in love with the easiest in basic vectordrawing. You won't regret.

User Rating: 4/10

Memory hog

Pros:

Cons:

Review: If you're planning to install Illustrator 9 in your computer, you'd better buy some extra RAM before... If your computer is somewhat dated, forget about this program. It won't work... As for its interface: why is it that complicated? All these annoying floating palettes on the screen...it is unintuitive and it takes two or three steps more than CorelDraw to achieve the same results in every little task.

User Rating: 8/10

it's still the best vector program there is.

Pros:

Cons:

Review: It remains the best, but some buggy behavior with cursors and selectors are frustrating for a graphic designer. Print production capabilities are not sacrificed by adding new web capabilities.

User Rating: 9/10

Why Trade Up to Adobe Illustrator 9.0?

Pros:

Cons:

Review: New Transparency Palette Adobe illustrator 9 introduces the new Transparency palette. You can now apply varying levels of transparency to any object, bitmap or type character. You can apply transparency to layers, groups of objects, knockout shapes, stroke and fill. Also, you can create special effects, such as confining blending to a group of objects. Now, graphic artist can create graduated transparencies on blends. New Features Several new features in Illustrator 9.0 will be familiar to veteran Adobe Photoshop users: The new real-time transparency effects. (There is a new tab on the Stroke and gradient dialog, with a slider.) Select an object, slide the transparency value to 80 percent and the objects beneath it show through. You can move the transparent object at will. New Styles Palette Apply drop shadows, glows, scribbled outline effects or dozens of other visual effects to any object or text. The text remains fully editable. The Layers functions are useful to web designers using Adobe Illustrator 9 for improving their drawings. The new release Layers to Flash function allows Illustrator 9 to be used to produce morphing object and animation effects. Pixel Preview Mode and ?Save for Web? Dialog ? Pixels are now supported as a measurement method. The new Pixel Preview mode allows you to preview your vector objects as they would appear in a web browser. Objects snap to the nearest pixel edge in the document. ? Adobe Illustrator 9 ?Save for Web? dialog is almost the same as the ?Save to Web? dialog in Photoshop. ? This allows you to preview up to four different optimization settings for output to either JPEG, GIF, PNG-8 or PNG-24 format files. Now, you can adjust the resulting image quality, file size, blur, number of colors in the image. ? Use the release to Layers feature in Illustrator 9. You can take all the objects in a given layer and assign each object its own layer which is useful for web animation. Pro Comments Noted are Adobe Illustrator 9?s new Opacity masks, Layer Clipping masks and Feathering functions, and overprint preview. Excellent hardcopy manual for learning how to use Adobe Illustrator 9 comes with the program. (No Missing Manual) Adobe Illustrator 9 has True transparency effects, styles palette and improved Flash support. Pixels can now be specified as a global measurement unit for sizing, editing, and laying out artwork. Con Comments Noted was the missing companion CD with Adobe Illustrator graphics that comes standard with Adobe Pagemaker Plus application. Also, I noted that some of the Selection tools can be confusing. I found that Masking tool some times flattens layers. Final Notes One of the most important changes to Illustrator 9 is its ability to work with web design projects. Illustrator 9 combines illustration tools with improved typographic control and image support. Adobe Illustrator 9 offers graphic artist and web designers more flexibility, better integration, along with new object effects. Pricing and Availability For first time buyers, Adobe Illustrator 9 is available for $399.00. For registered owners of previous versions of Illustrator, the price is $149.00. For more information, please visit the Adobe web site at: http://www.adobe.com/products/illustrator/main.html. Adobe Illustrator 9 System Requirements: Windows ? Pentium® II or faster Intel® processor ? Microsoft® Windows® 98, Windows NT® 4.0, or Windows 2000 operating system ?64 MB of RAM ? 105 MB of available hard-disk space ? CD-ROM drive ? Video card that supports 800x600 or greater monitor resolution ? If using Adobe® PostScript® printers: Adobe PostScript Level 2 or later required === Paul Gerstenbluth is President of ARIE Foundation and PC and MAC consultant. Paul writes computer reviews for PC and Mac software applications.

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Adobe Illustrator 9.0: Win98/NT4/2K specifications

  • General
  • Category Creativity application
  • Subcategory Creativity - graphics & image editing
  • Version 9.0
  • Language(s) English
  • License pricing Standard
  • Localization English
  • Software
  • License Type Complete package
  • License Qty 1 user
  • License Pricing Standard
  • Platform Windows
  • Distribution Media CD-ROM
  • Package Type Retail
  • System Requirements
  • OS Required Microsoft Windows 98 , Microsoft Windows 2000 , Microsoft Windows NT 4.0
  • Min Processor Type Intel Pentium
  • Min RAM Size 64.0 MB
  • Min Hard Drive Space 105.0 MB
  • Peripheral / Interface Devices CD-ROM
  • Service & Support
  • Service & Support Product info support
  • Service & Support Details Phone consulting - 30 days from first call
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