Comic Life is great for sharing those funny little moments from school, in the office, or while on worldwide progressive-rock-legends tours.
Robert Fripp and Tony Levin have been sharing the day-to-day stories of touring within one of the most influential prog rock bands - on King Crimson’s 40th Anniversary Tour.
Ever wished you had the fun of Comic Life handy at all times? Ever been out at a party, family gathering or on public transport and wished you could add your 'comic touch' to a photo? Now you can!
We're giggling with glee to announce Comic Touch for iPhone and iPod Touch. Add various speech balloons and captions to your photos. Choose a fun special effect to warp and bend your family and friends, then email the results to them!
'Chocolate & Chat: Writing for Teens and Young Adults’ tour!
plasq is proud to announce that we are sponsoring authors
James McCann and
kc dyer on their 'Chocolate & Chat: Writing for Teens and Young Adults’ tour.
The tour will go through Western Canadian Rocky Mountains from July 7-15th, 2008, with stops in Banff, Calgary, Red Deer, Cochrane, Kamloops, Salmon Arm and Kelowna. Click here for tour dates.
If you live nearby make sure you go along and say "Hi" for us! You may also enter a draw to win a copy of Comic Life Magiq or Comic Life Deluxe at each stop!
You can follow the authors travels on their websites - James McCann and kc dyer - where they will be doing a comic for each stop when they have a chance, using - you guessed it - Comic Life!
Cranium Comics has recently launched their first four color comic, Brawn #1.
"I used Comic Life on my Mac exclusively to lay out the storyboards, then later when I created and colored all 24 pages of the issue," recounted Anthony Rezendes, the owner of Cranium Comics and co-creator of Brawn.
The comic 'Brawn' focuses on a dockworker named Sam Ross who was reborn as the hero "Brawn" after he was nearly killed in a drunk driving accident.
"Being an illustrator, it saved me quite a bit of time from having to lay all the text bubbles out manually. It made the process of actually creating the comic that much more enjoyable," Mr. Rezendes added.
We think this comic is great! So check out 'Brawn' on the Cranium Comics site or read the first 5 pages on our Comic Life gallery.
Topic History of: Magiq - replacement or complement? Max. showing the last posts - (Last post first)
Author
Message
Thomas
I'm going to stick with classic as well after having demoed Magiq. Developers remember not everyone has fast Macbook Pros!
It's a shame as I really like the added vector-like editor for frames and balloons, and also the brush option for the lines. I just wish I could use it in the classic version of the software.
The UI needs to go back to looking more mac like to fit with everything else in the system.
Also it would be great to be able to paint and draw directly inside a blank frame, not just on top of pictures.
Cianmm
Another thing about the editor, I find it annoying that it always wants to be on the front. For instance, if I find myself apple-tabbing to another app to check something up, the editor follows and sticks itself up on top of the app.
Also, it is horifficly slow on my 2Gb RAM 2Ghz intel core duo macbook. Getting a lovely new Macbook Pro soon though, so that should fix that up.
I hope.
keith
Hello all,
We humbly appreciate all the feedback, in this case particularly on the Magiq image editor usability and size constrictions.
We'll definitely be looking into improving that in future, and are thankful for your support and letting us know what is great, and what is not great about Comic Life Magiq - so please do let us know which features you find great or frustrating to use.
Many thanks.
Keith
plasq
Kelly
Greg Ibendahl wrote:
I have to agree about the interface changes as I'm not a big fan of programs deviating from standard Mac design. My biggest issue is with the photo editor that comes up when you click on the artist paint board in the upper right hand corner of a selected photo. This brings up an editor that while makes it easy to find most of the tools but at the expense of wasting a tremendous amount of screen space. In particular, I would like to see more of the picture I'm trying to edit.
Can I second this? That Magiq editor clearly saw no usability testing. In fact, much of the product seems as if it's designed more for the screenshot than actual usability. I kind of wish I had upgraded Comic Life rather than spending my money on Magiq. I guess I can hope that Plasq puts some effort into making Magiq actually usable.
In reading the postings here and abroad I think the general sentiment is dissatisfaction.
Greg Ibendahl
I have to agree about the interface changes as I'm not a big fan of programs deviating from standard Mac design. My biggest issue is with the photo editor that comes up when you click on the artist paint board in the upper right hand corner of a selected photo. This brings up an editor that while makes it easy to find most of the tools but at the expense of wasting a tremendous amount of screen space. In particular, I would like to see more of the picture I'm trying to edit.
kevin dixey
I have been using Comic Life on and off for the past year and I quite like it so I decided to download the demo of Comic Life Magiq and take a look.
I have to agree with a previous post (at least in part) that the UI seems very un-mac like. It reminds me of another very cool but unsatisfying app Kai's Soap. I also find the performance on a C2D to be pretty slow and can assume it is because the core image stuff in Magiq relies heavily on the graphics card and the integrated graphics on the Macbook aren't up to it.
I think Magiq shows a lot of promise and looks to be quite fun and innovative but at least for now I think I will stick with Comic Life.