One news coverage from Midday
pple for artists
By: S R Ramakrishna     Date:  2009-03-18
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Bangalore:

Two top Mac pundits fly down with software and wit, and show Bangalore
a new bag of tricks

Apple sent down two of its top men yesterday to show what its new
operating system, the Leopard, could do for 'creative professionals'.

Alan and Rob (the company is shy about giving out their full names and
designations) also demonstrated a host of other applications that
excited the 200-strong crowd of Bangalore's artists, art students, art
directors, and Mac buffs. The event mostly covered advertising
territory, if you were wondering who 'creative professionals' were.

The presenters explained how Apple's diverse programs, such as
Aperture (for photos), Final Cut Pro (for video) and Soundtrack (for
music composing) were integrated, and showed how you could use them
together and with relatively less high-end applications such as iChat
and iTunes. (You could use iChat, for example, to get your client to
preview a slide show, and then, once you've got an okay, email your
work across with just another click).

Within minutes of starting his presentation, Alan had got the audience
repeating "time is money" after him. That was his way of rubbing it in
that Mac works faster and better than Windows. He took regular digs at
programs such as Excel, and his humour and mock histrionics won him an
appreciative audience. If Alan had been in Hollywood, he would have
given Jim Carey sleepless nights.

Sitting across the room and using two Mac laptops, the experts took
turns explaining programs and processes, while their screens were
projected on to a huge screen. The section where they played art
director and client trying to finalise a digital presentation was
educative even to those not familiar with Photoshop and Aperture. It
was a bit like watching a magician backstage, and actually getting to
see how he pulls off all those dazzling optical illusions.

Rob took a series of tame photos provided by a cycle brand, and showed
how, given limited raw material, artistic creativity and Apple tools
could still combine to produce smart promotional material. It looked
unbelievably simple, but remember, these tools aren't mastered in a
day, and not everyone is a Rob!

The Mac has always been the art professional's favourite computer. But
few start off on a Mac, and the transition from PC to Mac can be
forbidding. Apple is taking its handholding duty seriously and
encouraging people to make that switch. Conferences such as
yesterday's must be a step in that direction.

QUICK TAKES
>>Alan and Rob demonstrated how Mac programs could be used together
>>Chancery Pavilion's basement was filled with art pros and students
>>Apple competitors came in for good-natured ribbing

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