Adobe documentation (business owners take note)
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We have a full manual complete with tutorials and helpful tip and tricks, you name it. It's online and also downloadable in word or pdf format. You can access it by pressing f1 from any area of our app or from the download link where the software is downloaded etc etc. We have thousands of users in over 40 countries last time I checked and I'm willing to bet judging by the support questions and forum questions that no more than 1% have *ever* cracked the manual or bothered to look at it. People ask dead simple questions about stuff that's described in detail right at the top of the manual, we point them to it and say "that's covered in the manual on page blah blah" and they often are belligerent and say "why are you making me read the manual, just tell me right now how to do it". People in general seem to have an active dislike for reading *anything* these days. How many people even read books for enjoyment these days? I tell people I read a few chapters of a book every night before I go to sleep and they are shocked I don't have a tv instead in my bedroom so I don't "have" to read. On the other hand we have video tutorials and those are used heavily. They aren't offloading work to the customer they are putting resources where they do the most good. Us developers are probably the highest manual reading class of software users there is and it just drops off steeply from there. They *should* make it very easily accessed i.e. f1 button I agree. If you're going to the expense of making a manual then make it available for the readers out there. We've noticed this trend getting greater and greater in the last 10 years. We've often thought we should just make a cartoon manual since people hate to read so much these days.
"Creating your own blog is about as easy as creating your own urine, and you're about as likely to find someone else interested in it." -- Lore Sjöberg
John C wrote:
We've often thought we should just make a cartoon manual since people hate to read so much these days.
Someone started that, some little time ago. 'Starting Forth' and 'Thinking Forth' spring to mind as the progenitors of the practice.
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
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Christopher Duncan wrote:
I get much of my reading done in the bathroom, hence the stack of books and magazines
Maybe more roughage? :laugh:
Brady Kelly wrote:
Maybe more roughage?
I use that heavily embossed toilet tissue. That's plenty rough enough for me! :)
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
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Christopher Duncan wrote:
I get much of my reading done in the bathroom, hence the stack of books and magazines
Maybe more roughage? :laugh:
Yeah I wouldn't want him to lend me a book...
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John C wrote:
we point them to it and say "that's covered in the manual on page blah blah" and they often are belligerent and say "why are you making me read the manual, just tell me right now how to do it"
Yup, that actually happened to me. I actually bought a plane ticket to Ohio because the guy invited me up there to "kick my ass". I was more than happy to oblige him, so I bought a ticket on the next flight from San Diego to Columbus, and was leaving the parking lot on my way to the airport when the boss came running our to stop me. The next day, they hired someone else to do technical support. :)
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001Awesome, I'm forwarding your message to tech support right now, they'll drink a toast of coffee in your honour I'm sure.
"Creating your own blog is about as easy as creating your own urine, and you're about as likely to find someone else interested in it." -- Lore Sjöberg
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During the video upgrade of the studio, I decided to move from Vegas (I was 5 revs back) to Adobe Premiere Pro CS4. Being a geek at heart, I have a tendency to RTFM from cover to cover on new software to get a feel for the wheel. It goes without saying these days that there was no printed manual shipped, only a couple of DVDs. So, looked on the installation disk and there was no pdf documentation, nor was any installed. There was a DVD of movie tutorials, lame at best, and certainly not comprehensive. Upon further exploration, I discovered that bringing up help lead to a path where you could download the help file in pdf. Being rather old school, I know that a good help file is not at all the same as the user manual, but apparently this is no longer true. The help file is indeed the manual. Fine. Whatever. If you're too cheap to print one, at the very least you shouldn't make the customer scratch his head and poke around in order to find the user manual. Make it easy to use your product. I get much of my reading done in the bathroom, hence the stack of books and magazines. Perhaps you're comfortable with balancing a laptop at such times. I am not. Consequently, what I need is printed documentation. So, after stepping through, one app at a time, hunting down the pdf file and downloading it, I now get to print manuals out on my non-full-duplex printer. Those of you familiar with printing a 500 page manual in such a manner will no doubt have emotional scars from printing the second side only to have something get out of sync a third of the way through, forcing you to do multiple iterations to get it all done. And yes, I have nothing but free time to screw around with this stuff, thanks for asking. This is yet another example of companies making the customer do their work for free. I know nothing of Adobe Premiere, and I'm willing and eager to RTFM. However, before I can even begin learning how to use the software I just paid for, I have to jump through a number of PITA hoops that, as a customer, I shouldn't have to deal with. My point? Pushing off the work to the customer is an all too common practice today, in a great many industries, to the point where it's become standard operating procedure. Want to really stand out from the crowd, get excellent word of mouth and the loyalty of your customers? Think like a customer and bend over backwards to make their experience a pleasure, not a hassle. You'd be surprised what a huge competitive edge this can be since few companies think like this anymore.
I always take a book or cross-word in with me. You never know when the bog-roll is going to run out, do you? :)
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
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Yeah I wouldn't want him to lend me a book...
Let's just say that I don't have the normal problem of people borrowing books and not returning them. :)
Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Got a career question? Ask the Attack Chihuahua!
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:omg: Seriously, Jim, whatever you're smoking, it's time to share. :-D
Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Got a career question? Ask the Attack Chihuahua!
Just let me know next time your in NYC :)
¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! Personal 3D projects Just Say No to Web 2 Point Blow
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John C wrote:
we point them to it and say "that's covered in the manual on page blah blah" and they often are belligerent and say "why are you making me read the manual, just tell me right now how to do it"
Yup, that actually happened to me. I actually bought a plane ticket to Ohio because the guy invited me up there to "kick my ass". I was more than happy to oblige him, so I bought a ticket on the next flight from San Diego to Columbus, and was leaving the parking lot on my way to the airport when the boss came running our to stop me. The next day, they hired someone else to do technical support. :)
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001:laugh: You bad ass! You are now my new icon of awesomeness! :laugh:
If the post was helpful, please vote! Current activities: Book: Devils by Fyodor Dostoyevsky Project: Hospital Automation, final stage Learning: Image analysis, LINQ Now and forever, defiant to the end. What is Multiple Sclerosis[^]?
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During the video upgrade of the studio, I decided to move from Vegas (I was 5 revs back) to Adobe Premiere Pro CS4. Being a geek at heart, I have a tendency to RTFM from cover to cover on new software to get a feel for the wheel. It goes without saying these days that there was no printed manual shipped, only a couple of DVDs. So, looked on the installation disk and there was no pdf documentation, nor was any installed. There was a DVD of movie tutorials, lame at best, and certainly not comprehensive. Upon further exploration, I discovered that bringing up help lead to a path where you could download the help file in pdf. Being rather old school, I know that a good help file is not at all the same as the user manual, but apparently this is no longer true. The help file is indeed the manual. Fine. Whatever. If you're too cheap to print one, at the very least you shouldn't make the customer scratch his head and poke around in order to find the user manual. Make it easy to use your product. I get much of my reading done in the bathroom, hence the stack of books and magazines. Perhaps you're comfortable with balancing a laptop at such times. I am not. Consequently, what I need is printed documentation. So, after stepping through, one app at a time, hunting down the pdf file and downloading it, I now get to print manuals out on my non-full-duplex printer. Those of you familiar with printing a 500 page manual in such a manner will no doubt have emotional scars from printing the second side only to have something get out of sync a third of the way through, forcing you to do multiple iterations to get it all done. And yes, I have nothing but free time to screw around with this stuff, thanks for asking. This is yet another example of companies making the customer do their work for free. I know nothing of Adobe Premiere, and I'm willing and eager to RTFM. However, before I can even begin learning how to use the software I just paid for, I have to jump through a number of PITA hoops that, as a customer, I shouldn't have to deal with. My point? Pushing off the work to the customer is an all too common practice today, in a great many industries, to the point where it's become standard operating procedure. Want to really stand out from the crowd, get excellent word of mouth and the loyalty of your customers? Think like a customer and bend over backwards to make their experience a pleasure, not a hassle. You'd be surprised what a huge competitive edge this can be since few companies think like this anymore.
I could not agree more. As a side rant, when you buy a book and have to go to their site do download the code. I understand that it may be buggy and need to be updated but just give me the disk. Book prices have not come down so why no disk?? Mike
"It doesn't matter how big a ranch ya' own, or how many cows ya' brand, the size of your funeral is still gonna depend on the weather." -Harry Truman.
Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site
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John C wrote:
we point them to it and say "that's covered in the manual on page blah blah" and they often are belligerent and say "why are you making me read the manual, just tell me right now how to do it"
Yup, that actually happened to me. I actually bought a plane ticket to Ohio because the guy invited me up there to "kick my ass". I was more than happy to oblige him, so I bought a ticket on the next flight from San Diego to Columbus, and was leaving the parking lot on my way to the airport when the boss came running our to stop me. The next day, they hired someone else to do technical support. :)
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001John Simmons / outlaw programmer wrote:
I actually bought a plane ticket to Ohio because the guy invited me up there to "kick my ass". I was more than happy to oblige him
That's excellent customer service, really going out of your way to give the customer what he asked for ... :rolleyes:
:..::. Douglas H. Troy ::..
Bad Astronomy |VCF|wxWidgets|WTL -
We have a full manual complete with tutorials and helpful tip and tricks, you name it. It's online and also downloadable in word or pdf format. You can access it by pressing f1 from any area of our app or from the download link where the software is downloaded etc etc. We have thousands of users in over 40 countries last time I checked and I'm willing to bet judging by the support questions and forum questions that no more than 1% have *ever* cracked the manual or bothered to look at it. People ask dead simple questions about stuff that's described in detail right at the top of the manual, we point them to it and say "that's covered in the manual on page blah blah" and they often are belligerent and say "why are you making me read the manual, just tell me right now how to do it". People in general seem to have an active dislike for reading *anything* these days. How many people even read books for enjoyment these days? I tell people I read a few chapters of a book every night before I go to sleep and they are shocked I don't have a tv instead in my bedroom so I don't "have" to read. On the other hand we have video tutorials and those are used heavily. They aren't offloading work to the customer they are putting resources where they do the most good. Us developers are probably the highest manual reading class of software users there is and it just drops off steeply from there. They *should* make it very easily accessed i.e. f1 button I agree. If you're going to the expense of making a manual then make it available for the readers out there. We've noticed this trend getting greater and greater in the last 10 years. We've often thought we should just make a cartoon manual since people hate to read so much these days.
"Creating your own blog is about as easy as creating your own urine, and you're about as likely to find someone else interested in it." -- Lore Sjöberg
John C wrote:
we have video tutorials and those are used heavily.
That's interesting. I have been wondering about it. I personally hate watching videos about a topic because they take far more time compared to reading about the same topic.
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During the video upgrade of the studio, I decided to move from Vegas (I was 5 revs back) to Adobe Premiere Pro CS4. Being a geek at heart, I have a tendency to RTFM from cover to cover on new software to get a feel for the wheel. It goes without saying these days that there was no printed manual shipped, only a couple of DVDs. So, looked on the installation disk and there was no pdf documentation, nor was any installed. There was a DVD of movie tutorials, lame at best, and certainly not comprehensive. Upon further exploration, I discovered that bringing up help lead to a path where you could download the help file in pdf. Being rather old school, I know that a good help file is not at all the same as the user manual, but apparently this is no longer true. The help file is indeed the manual. Fine. Whatever. If you're too cheap to print one, at the very least you shouldn't make the customer scratch his head and poke around in order to find the user manual. Make it easy to use your product. I get much of my reading done in the bathroom, hence the stack of books and magazines. Perhaps you're comfortable with balancing a laptop at such times. I am not. Consequently, what I need is printed documentation. So, after stepping through, one app at a time, hunting down the pdf file and downloading it, I now get to print manuals out on my non-full-duplex printer. Those of you familiar with printing a 500 page manual in such a manner will no doubt have emotional scars from printing the second side only to have something get out of sync a third of the way through, forcing you to do multiple iterations to get it all done. And yes, I have nothing but free time to screw around with this stuff, thanks for asking. This is yet another example of companies making the customer do their work for free. I know nothing of Adobe Premiere, and I'm willing and eager to RTFM. However, before I can even begin learning how to use the software I just paid for, I have to jump through a number of PITA hoops that, as a customer, I shouldn't have to deal with. My point? Pushing off the work to the customer is an all too common practice today, in a great many industries, to the point where it's become standard operating procedure. Want to really stand out from the crowd, get excellent word of mouth and the loyalty of your customers? Think like a customer and bend over backwards to make their experience a pleasure, not a hassle. You'd be surprised what a huge competitive edge this can be since few companies think like this anymore.
Christopher Duncan wrote:
This is yet another example of companies making the customer do their work for free.
You're not doing the work for free. You're doing it for the price reduction in the software that was made possible by Adobe not including a printed manual in the first place.
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John C wrote:
we have video tutorials and those are used heavily.
That's interesting. I have been wondering about it. I personally hate watching videos about a topic because they take far more time compared to reading about the same topic.
I feel the same, but the illiteratti can watch a video in a fraction of the time it takes to read the text. :((
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a zombie in possession of brains must be in want of more brains. -- Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
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I could not agree more. As a side rant, when you buy a book and have to go to their site do download the code. I understand that it may be buggy and need to be updated but just give me the disk. Book prices have not come down so why no disk?? Mike
"It doesn't matter how big a ranch ya' own, or how many cows ya' brand, the size of your funeral is still gonna depend on the weather." -Harry Truman.
Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site
Book manufacturing prices have gone up. Adding a disk costs between $1 and 2; but I'm not sure if this amount is calculated at retail, or from the publishers end. Where the charge is applied makes a large difference in its 'real' cost. For every dollar of the cover price, 50-60c go to the retailer (Amazon gets at bigger discount on truckload than Mom and Pop do for 5 copies. 8-15c go to the author as royalties (depending on printing type and sales volume), the distributor gets a few cents, the remaining 20-40 cents goes to the publisher to pay for printing, editing, marketing, losses on flops, etc. For the curious, discounts (eg loyalty cards or Amazons hard cover discounts) come out of the retailers nominal profit, the upstream flow of cash isn't affected.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a zombie in possession of brains must be in want of more brains. -- Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
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During the video upgrade of the studio, I decided to move from Vegas (I was 5 revs back) to Adobe Premiere Pro CS4. Being a geek at heart, I have a tendency to RTFM from cover to cover on new software to get a feel for the wheel. It goes without saying these days that there was no printed manual shipped, only a couple of DVDs. So, looked on the installation disk and there was no pdf documentation, nor was any installed. There was a DVD of movie tutorials, lame at best, and certainly not comprehensive. Upon further exploration, I discovered that bringing up help lead to a path where you could download the help file in pdf. Being rather old school, I know that a good help file is not at all the same as the user manual, but apparently this is no longer true. The help file is indeed the manual. Fine. Whatever. If you're too cheap to print one, at the very least you shouldn't make the customer scratch his head and poke around in order to find the user manual. Make it easy to use your product. I get much of my reading done in the bathroom, hence the stack of books and magazines. Perhaps you're comfortable with balancing a laptop at such times. I am not. Consequently, what I need is printed documentation. So, after stepping through, one app at a time, hunting down the pdf file and downloading it, I now get to print manuals out on my non-full-duplex printer. Those of you familiar with printing a 500 page manual in such a manner will no doubt have emotional scars from printing the second side only to have something get out of sync a third of the way through, forcing you to do multiple iterations to get it all done. And yes, I have nothing but free time to screw around with this stuff, thanks for asking. This is yet another example of companies making the customer do their work for free. I know nothing of Adobe Premiere, and I'm willing and eager to RTFM. However, before I can even begin learning how to use the software I just paid for, I have to jump through a number of PITA hoops that, as a customer, I shouldn't have to deal with. My point? Pushing off the work to the customer is an all too common practice today, in a great many industries, to the point where it's become standard operating procedure. Want to really stand out from the crowd, get excellent word of mouth and the loyalty of your customers? Think like a customer and bend over backwards to make their experience a pleasure, not a hassle. You'd be surprised what a huge competitive edge this can be since few companies think like this anymore.
Ever since Microsoft pioneered undocumented software this situation has grown worse. And yes, I consider online "help" and manuals worthless. Give me books, entire forests of extinct deciduous trees of them - I don't care. If your product doesn't include a printed, comprehensive user manual, you haven't done your job.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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During the video upgrade of the studio, I decided to move from Vegas (I was 5 revs back) to Adobe Premiere Pro CS4. Being a geek at heart, I have a tendency to RTFM from cover to cover on new software to get a feel for the wheel. It goes without saying these days that there was no printed manual shipped, only a couple of DVDs. So, looked on the installation disk and there was no pdf documentation, nor was any installed. There was a DVD of movie tutorials, lame at best, and certainly not comprehensive. Upon further exploration, I discovered that bringing up help lead to a path where you could download the help file in pdf. Being rather old school, I know that a good help file is not at all the same as the user manual, but apparently this is no longer true. The help file is indeed the manual. Fine. Whatever. If you're too cheap to print one, at the very least you shouldn't make the customer scratch his head and poke around in order to find the user manual. Make it easy to use your product. I get much of my reading done in the bathroom, hence the stack of books and magazines. Perhaps you're comfortable with balancing a laptop at such times. I am not. Consequently, what I need is printed documentation. So, after stepping through, one app at a time, hunting down the pdf file and downloading it, I now get to print manuals out on my non-full-duplex printer. Those of you familiar with printing a 500 page manual in such a manner will no doubt have emotional scars from printing the second side only to have something get out of sync a third of the way through, forcing you to do multiple iterations to get it all done. And yes, I have nothing but free time to screw around with this stuff, thanks for asking. This is yet another example of companies making the customer do their work for free. I know nothing of Adobe Premiere, and I'm willing and eager to RTFM. However, before I can even begin learning how to use the software I just paid for, I have to jump through a number of PITA hoops that, as a customer, I shouldn't have to deal with. My point? Pushing off the work to the customer is an all too common practice today, in a great many industries, to the point where it's become standard operating procedure. Want to really stand out from the crowd, get excellent word of mouth and the loyalty of your customers? Think like a customer and bend over backwards to make their experience a pleasure, not a hassle. You'd be surprised what a huge competitive edge this can be since few companies think like this anymore.
Christopher Duncan wrote:
Pushing off the work to the customer is an all too common practice today
In a few years, software products will simply be a fortune cookie, and on the little piece of paper it'll have a URL to Microsoft's VS Express with "writee yourselfee" on other side. Marc
I'm not overthinking the problem, I just felt like I needed a small, unimportant, uninteresting rant! - Martin Hart Turner
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During the video upgrade of the studio, I decided to move from Vegas (I was 5 revs back) to Adobe Premiere Pro CS4. Being a geek at heart, I have a tendency to RTFM from cover to cover on new software to get a feel for the wheel. It goes without saying these days that there was no printed manual shipped, only a couple of DVDs. So, looked on the installation disk and there was no pdf documentation, nor was any installed. There was a DVD of movie tutorials, lame at best, and certainly not comprehensive. Upon further exploration, I discovered that bringing up help lead to a path where you could download the help file in pdf. Being rather old school, I know that a good help file is not at all the same as the user manual, but apparently this is no longer true. The help file is indeed the manual. Fine. Whatever. If you're too cheap to print one, at the very least you shouldn't make the customer scratch his head and poke around in order to find the user manual. Make it easy to use your product. I get much of my reading done in the bathroom, hence the stack of books and magazines. Perhaps you're comfortable with balancing a laptop at such times. I am not. Consequently, what I need is printed documentation. So, after stepping through, one app at a time, hunting down the pdf file and downloading it, I now get to print manuals out on my non-full-duplex printer. Those of you familiar with printing a 500 page manual in such a manner will no doubt have emotional scars from printing the second side only to have something get out of sync a third of the way through, forcing you to do multiple iterations to get it all done. And yes, I have nothing but free time to screw around with this stuff, thanks for asking. This is yet another example of companies making the customer do their work for free. I know nothing of Adobe Premiere, and I'm willing and eager to RTFM. However, before I can even begin learning how to use the software I just paid for, I have to jump through a number of PITA hoops that, as a customer, I shouldn't have to deal with. My point? Pushing off the work to the customer is an all too common practice today, in a great many industries, to the point where it's become standard operating procedure. Want to really stand out from the crowd, get excellent word of mouth and the loyalty of your customers? Think like a customer and bend over backwards to make their experience a pleasure, not a hassle. You'd be surprised what a huge competitive edge this can be since few companies think like this anymore.
Some years ago, several studies found that there was an inverse relationship between experience and the use of manuals, printed or otherwise, and online help. When novice users do go to help, they don't want details, but walk-throughs; they want the steps to accomplish a task. You see the results of this in Microsoft Office. The implications for developers is huge. Our demographic uses online help of various kinds a lot, yet we are largely dealing with customers who don't. Unfortunately, the tendency for developers is to write the kind of factual help they (and the management paying salaries) prefer, not the step-by-step help customers prefer (but which is very expensive to produce.) As a side note, at one point the Adobe Premiere site explained why no manuals shipped with the product. I don't see it there now and it may have lasted only a short time when the change was first made. PS. I'm curious about your experience switching to Premiere. I've preferred earlier versions of Premiere over Vegas and most other editors (I've gone back and forth on AVID--I liked some of the features, but disliked others.) My experience was that Premiere is a harder product to learn, but is much more productive once learned. By comparison, learning the basics in Vegas was easy, but many advanced features were obscure, hard to figure out or simply absent (sliding the soundtrack to resync was a big pain. Unless it's changed, doing it in Premiere was a breeze, but I recognize that it just may have made more sense to me. S-cuts were also not even present in Vegas for a long time, if ever.)
Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke
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Christopher Duncan wrote:
This is yet another example of companies making the customer do their work for free.
You're not doing the work for free. You're doing it for the price reduction in the software that was made possible by Adobe not including a printed manual in the first place.
You mean I did all that nonsense for $10? Man, I'm working cheap.
Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Got a career question? Ask the Attack Chihuahua!
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Ever since Microsoft pioneered undocumented software this situation has grown worse. And yes, I consider online "help" and manuals worthless. Give me books, entire forests of extinct deciduous trees of them - I don't care. If your product doesn't include a printed, comprehensive user manual, you haven't done your job.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Yeah, what you said. I'll start lobbying for forests when I see trees wearing little "Save the Humans" t-shirts. :)
Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Got a career question? Ask the Attack Chihuahua!
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Some years ago, several studies found that there was an inverse relationship between experience and the use of manuals, printed or otherwise, and online help. When novice users do go to help, they don't want details, but walk-throughs; they want the steps to accomplish a task. You see the results of this in Microsoft Office. The implications for developers is huge. Our demographic uses online help of various kinds a lot, yet we are largely dealing with customers who don't. Unfortunately, the tendency for developers is to write the kind of factual help they (and the management paying salaries) prefer, not the step-by-step help customers prefer (but which is very expensive to produce.) As a side note, at one point the Adobe Premiere site explained why no manuals shipped with the product. I don't see it there now and it may have lasted only a short time when the change was first made. PS. I'm curious about your experience switching to Premiere. I've preferred earlier versions of Premiere over Vegas and most other editors (I've gone back and forth on AVID--I liked some of the features, but disliked others.) My experience was that Premiere is a harder product to learn, but is much more productive once learned. By comparison, learning the basics in Vegas was easy, but many advanced features were obscure, hard to figure out or simply absent (sliding the soundtrack to resync was a big pain. Unless it's changed, doing it in Premiere was a breeze, but I recognize that it just may have made more sense to me. S-cuts were also not even present in Vegas for a long time, if ever.)
Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke
That's my take as well. More to learn with Premeire (hence printing the FMs) as opposed to Vegas' intuitive approach. However, my gut feeling is that Adobe has much more horsepower, and there's also its integration with the host of other Adobe products. I don't mind the learning curve if the end result is worth it, and I suspect it will be.
Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Got a career question? Ask the Attack Chihuahua!