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Thomas Penberthy
Freelance writer Tom Penberthy was on the launch team for creativepro.com. As associate editor, he wrote the Creativeprose newsletter, managed the rabid pack of creativepro's freelance writers, and shot rubberbands at coworkers. Tom has been a graphic designer, prepress operator, and somewhere back there a benevolent monarch of a tropical island nation, a station to which he hopes to ascend again soon.
Review: Adobe Contribute 4
Reviews: Written by Thomas Penberthy on November 17, 2006
The new version of the Web content updater jumps on the blog bandwagon but leaves its old friends behind.
Review: SiteAssist 3.0
Reviews: Written by Thomas Penberthy on September 27, 2006
Whether you're not a coding pro or are just pressed for time, this Dreamweaver extension wants to help. Is it worth the money? And how does it compare to Contribute?
Successful Branding with Brochures
Features: Written by Thomas Penberthy on March 22, 2006
A good brochure is a balancing act of effective communication and appropriate design. To deliver, you need a shrewd understanding of your client and the target audience. Here are the three steps that will get you there, plus examples of five brochures that do the job right.
Contribute 2: Macromedia Gives Web Content Creators Equal and Easy Access
Reviews: Written by Thomas Penberthy on October 15, 2003
Macromedia revs its popular Web updating tool that gives editorial contributors the ability to easily access and change site content without having to know HTML or complicated authoring applications. Contribute 2 also adds Mac OS X support.
Macromedia Contribute: The Web Was Never So Easy to Change
Features: Written by Thomas Penberthy on November 11, 2002
The just-announced Macromedia Contribute promises to lighten the workloads of Web developers while allowing even non-technical computer users to update Web content at their leisure. Here's a first look at a product that may change in-house Web development.
Macromedia MX: An "Office" Suite for the Web?
Features: Written by Thomas Penberthy on April 30, 2002
Macromedia recently announced the Macromedia MX product family, which encompasses all the major tools in its belt: Flash, Dreamweaver, FreeHand, Fireworks, and Cold Fusion. The MX moniker across the product line symbolizes Macromedia's aim toward creating a complete family of tool, server, and client technologies.
Flash MX: Enabling the Rich Internet
Features: Written by Thomas Penberthy on March 19, 2002
Macromedia's new vision of Flash offers video and audio integration, a polished and streamlined interface, and enhanced graphic tools.
Wacom Cintiq: Drawing on Graphic Experience
Reviews: Written by Thomas Penberthy on January 7, 2002
The Cintiq is not Wacom's first combination tablet/LCD device, but with a large, bright screen, natural-feeling drawing surface, and innovative stand, the $1,899 Cintiq is the first one good enough to make you consider skipping a mortgage payment to buy one.
Macworld NY: What Did It Mean?
Features: Written by Thomas Penberthy on July 22, 2001
With this year's New York event, Apple further buttresses the hardware and software foundation that will help it grow, but it may still be too early for the creative professional to migrate to OS X.
The Ceiva Digital Picture Frame: One Technophobe's Journey
Features: Written by Thomas Penberthy on May 26, 2001
The Ceiva digital picture frame is essentially a 5 x 7 inch LCD display encased in a subtle and stately black matted wooden frame.
For Design, It Was Standing Room Only
Features: Written by Thomas Penberthy on April 19, 2001
Taking a last stroll around Boston last Friday (the last day of Seybold Seminars Boston 2001), I was nearly flattened by a teenaged skateboarder on Newbury Street. After the near miss, he deftly diffused my building ire with a smile, a tip of his backwards Red Sox hat, and a chipper "Terribly sorry!" before zipping off down the sidewalk.
Iomega Zip 250 USB
Features: Written by Thomas Penberthy on March 10, 2000
At $179, the Zip 250 USB is an inexpensive and widely supported solution for keeping your files mobile. That the Zip is the most prevalent solution for removable storage is what keeps it a viable option.
Invasion of the .coms
Features: Written by Thomas Penberthy on February 10, 2000