Quark takes on Adobe with e-publishing partnership

Ten years ago, Quark was the tool of choice for producing Wired magazine and many other high-production-value publications. Since then, Adobe’s less expensive, aggressively competitive InDesign has stolen a lot of Quark’s customers.

Now, Quark is making a move to win back glossy-publication developers trying to move onto digital platforms without hiring lots more staff. This morning, the company announced a three-way partnership with Ray Kurzweil’s K-NFB Reading Technology and digital distributors Baker & Taylor. QuarkXPress, the new authoring tool, is being beefed up to enable non-engineers to add animation, interaction, and video into their content, in the same way Wired used InDesign to create its hotshot demo of iPad publishing.

I got a long demo yesterday, but the videos below do a better job of showing what’s new. QuarkXPress can be used to add motion and embed slideshows and video clips to content already produced for print. K-NFB’s Blio software enables the multimedia content to play on a wide range of laptops, netbooks, smartphones, and forthcoming tablets. Yes, it works on Apple gadgets.

Baker & Taylor are where new media meets old-school distribution. The Charlotte, North Carolina company is unheard of in San Francisco, but they’ve been in business for 180 years. Baker & Taylor distributes digital wares to retailers like Target, device manufacturers, libraries, academic institutions and corporate customers — tens of thousands of companies and organizations.

The video below shows what Quark and Blio can do technically.

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About the Author, Paul Boutin

Paul (paul@venturebeat.com) covers Apple & the iPhone, social networks & social media, digital music & video, and any crazy Internet story. Paul wrote and edited for Valleywag from 2006-2008, after several years with Wired magazine and Slate. He writes regularly for The New York Times' Personal Tech section and sometimes for Wired and The Wall Street Journal. He studied computer science at MIT in the early 1980s, and worked as a software developer and network administrator for 15 years before becoming a professional writer. Follow him on Twitter at @paulboutin, and follow VentureBeat on Twitter at @venturebeat.

  • The aging, irrelevant program you're writing about is QuarkXpress. not Quark Express [sic].
  • PaulBoutin
    Thanks, Sandy.
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