A key component that led to PageMaker's success was its native support for
Adobe Systems'
PostScript page description language. After Adobe purchased the majority of Aldus's assets (including
FreeHand,
PressWise, PageMaker, etc.) in 1994 and subsequently phased out the Aldus name, version 6 was released. The program remained a major force in the high-end DTP market through the early 1990s, but new features were slow in coming. By the mid-1990s, it faced increasing competition from
QuarkXPress on the Mac, and to a lesser degree,
Ventura on the PC, and by the end of the decade it was no longer a major force. Quark proposed buying the product and canceling it, but instead, in 1999 Adobe released their "Quark Killer",
Adobe InDesign. The last major release of PageMaker came in 2001, and customers were offered InDesign licenses at a lower cost.
Release history
Aldus Pagemaker 1.0 was released in July 1985 for the Macintosh and in December 1986 for the IBM PC.[5][6]
Aldus Pagemaker 1.2 for Macintosh was released in 1986 and added support for PostScript fonts built into
LaserWriter Plus or downloaded to the memory of other output devices.[7] PageMaker was awarded a
Codie award for Best New Use of a Computer in 1986. In October 1986, a version of Pagemaker was made available for
Hewlett-Packard's
HP Vectra computers. In 1987, Pagemaker was available on
Digital Equipment's
VAXstation computers.[6]
Aldus Pagemaker 2.0 was released in 1987. Until May 1987, the initial Windows release was bundled with a full version of Windows 1.0.3; after that date, a "Windows-runtime" without task-switching capabilities was included.[8][9] Thus, users who did not have Windows could run the application from
MS-DOS.
Aldus Pagemaker 3.0 for Macintosh was shipped in April 1988.[10] PageMaker 3.0 for the PC was shipped in May 1988[11] and required
Windows 2.0,[12] which was bundled as a run-time version.[13] Version 3.01 was available for
OS/2 and took extensive advantage of
multithreading for improved user responsiveness.
Aldus PageMaker 4.0 for Macintosh was released in 1990 and offered new word-processing capabilities, expanded typographic controls, and enhanced features for handling long documents.[14] A version for the PC was available by 1991.
Aldus PageMaker 5.0 was released in January 1993.[6]
Adobe PageMaker 6.0 was released in 1995, a year after Adobe Systems acquired Aldus Corporation.
Adobe PageMaker 6.5 was released in 1996. Support for versions 4.0, 5.0, 6.0, and 6.5 is no longer offered through the official Adobe support system. Due to Aldus' use of closed, proprietary data formats, this poses
substantial problems for users who have works authored in these legacy versions.
Adobe PageMaker 7.0 was the final version made available. It was released 9 July 2001, though updates have been released for the two supported platforms since. The Macintosh version runs only in
Mac OS 9 or earlier; there is no native support for
Mac OS X,[15] and it does not run on Intel-based Macs without
SheepShaver. It does not run well under
Classic, and Adobe recommends that customers use an older Macintosh capable of booting into Mac OS 9. The Windows version supports
Windows XP, but according to Adobe, "PageMaker 7.x does not install or run on Windows Vista."[16]
End of development
Development of PageMaker had flagged in the later years at Aldus and, by 1998, PageMaker had lost almost the entire professional market[17] to the comparatively
feature-richQuarkXPress 3.3, released in 1992, and 4.0, released in 1996. Quark stated its intention to buy out Adobe and to divest the combined company of PageMaker to avoid anti-trust issues. Adobe rebuffed the offer and instead continued to work on a new page layout application code-named "Shuksan" (later "K2"), originally started by Aldus, openly planned and positioned as a "Quark killer". This was released as
Adobe InDesign 1.0 in 1999.[18][19]
The last major release of PageMaker was 7.0 in 2001, after which the product was seen as "languishing on life support".[20] Adobe ceased all development of PageMaker in 2004 and "strongly encouraged" users to migrate to InDesign, initially through special "InDesign PageMaker Edition" and "PageMaker Plug-in" versions, which added PageMaker's data merge, bullet, and numbering features to InDesign, and provided PageMaker-oriented help topics, complimentary
Myriad Pro fonts, and templates.[21] From 2005, these features were bundled into InDesign CS2, which was offered at half-price to existing PageMaker customers.[22][23]
No new major versions of Adobe PageMaker have been released since, and it does not ship alongside Adobe InDesign.
Reception
BYTE in 1989 listed PageMaker 3.0 as among the "Distinction" winners of the BYTE Awards, stating that it "is the program that showed many of us how to use the Macintosh to its full potential".[24]
File formats
Adobe PageMaker file formats use various
filename extensions, including PMD, PM3, PM4, PM5, PM6 and P65; these should be able to be opened in the applications
Collabora Online,
LibreOffice or
Apache OpenOffice, they can then be saved into the OpenDocument format or other file formats.
^Michael J. Miller: First Look. In:
InfoWorld Volume 9, Issue 9, 2 March 1987.
ISSN0199-6649. - Short comparison of PageMaker,
Ventura Publisher and Harvard Professional Publisher, a modified version of Superpage by Bestinfo.
^Aldus Corp. Ships PageMaker 3.0 for the Macintosh. BusinessWire, 24 March 1988.
^Aldus Ships PC Version of PageMaker 3.0. Businesswire, 19 May 1988.
^The precise Windows version required was 2.03, which is the exact version number of the first publicly available Windows 2 release. cf.
Windows Version History. Microsoft Knowledge Base, Document No. 32905. Last access date 22 July 2010.
^https://www.referenceforbusiness.com/history2/54/Aldus-Corporation.html
Reference for Business Company History Index Information Technology
Aldus Corporation - Company Profile, Information, Business Description, History, Background Information on Aldus Corporation
41 First Avenue South
Seattle, Washington 98104-2871
U.S.A.