All about ICT
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
List of Adobe software
Product name | Latest major version | Available in |
---|---|---|
Acrobat family | ||
Acrobat | DC | Standalone package Creative Suite Technical Communication Suite eLearning Suite |
Acrobat.com | N/A | www |
Reader | DC | Standalone package |
Portable Document Format (PDF) | 1.7 | N/A |
Flash family | ||
Flash Professional | CC (13) | Standalone package Creative Suite eLearning Suite |
Flash Builder | 4.7 | Standalone package Creative Suite |
Flash Catalyst | CS5.5 | Standalone package |
Flash Lite | 4 | Standalone package |
Flash Media Live Encoder | 3 | Standalone package |
Flash Media Server | 4 | |
Flash Player | 12 | Standalone package |
FlashTime | ? | Standalone package |
Apache Flex | 4.12 | Standalone package |
Integrated Runtime (or shortly AIR) | 4 | Standalone package |
Adobe Scout | CC (1.1.3) | Standalone package |
Photoshop family | ||
Fireworks | CS6 (13) | Standalone package Creative Suite Photoshop |
Photoshop | CC (14.2)[1] | Standalone package Creative Suite eLearning Suite |
Photoshop Elements | 12 | Standalone package |
Photoshop Express | N/A | www |
Photoshop Lightroom | CC (6) | Standalone package |
eLearning family | ||
Adobe Captivate | 8.0 | Standalone package |
Adobe Captivate eLearning Voices | 8.0 | Standalone package |
Adobe Captivate eLearning Assets | 8.0 | Standalone package |
Premiere family | ||
Premiere Elements | 12 | Standalone package |
Premiere Express | N/A | YouTube Photobucket MTV.com |
Premiere Pro | CC (7) | Standalone package Creative Suite |
OnLocation (formerly Serious Magic DV Rack; discontinued- see Adobe Prelude) | CS5 (5) | Creative Suite Premiere Pro |
Shockwave family | ||
Director | 12 | Standalone package |
Shockwave Player | 12 | Standalone package |
Type family | ||
OpenType | 1.6 | N/A |
Adobe Originals | Adobe Text - 2010 | Standalone package |
PostScript | 3 | N/A |
Edge family | ||
Adobe Edge Animate | 3.0 | |
Adobe Edge Reflow | NA | |
Adobe Edge Code | NA | |
Adobe Edge Inspect | NA | |
Adobe Edge Web Fonts | NA | |
PhoneGap | 3.0 | |
Typekit | NA | |
ColdFusion family | ||
ColdFusion | 11 | Standalone package |
ColdFusion Builder | 3 | Standalone package |
Others | ||
After Effects | CC (12) | Standalone Creative Suite |
Audition (formerly Cool Edit Pro) | CC (6) | Standalone package Creative Suite (eLearning Suite) |
Bridge | CC | Creative Suite Audition eLearning Suite Photoshop |
BrowserLab | N/A | browserlab |
Adobe Prelude | CC | Standalone Creative Suite |
Business Catalyst | 2.0 | Standalone package |
Captivate | 8.0 | Standalone package Technical Communication Suite eLearning Suite |
Connect (formerly Macromedia Breeze) | 9 | Standalone package Creative Suite eLearning Suite |
Content Server | 4 | Standalone package |
Contribute | 6.5 | Standalone package Creative Suite |
Digital Editions | 1 | Standalone package |
Digital Negative | 1 | N/A |
DNG Converter | 1 | ? |
Device Central | CS5.5 | Creative Suite eLearning Suite Photoshop Illustrator Flash Professional Dreamweaver After Effects Premiere Pro |
Dreamweaver | CC (13) | Standalone package Creative Suite eLearning Suite |
Dynamic Link | ? | Standalone package Creative Suite* *As of CS6, Dynamic Link functionality no longer requires the purchase of a Suite. |
Encore | CS6 (6) | Standalone package Creative Suite |
Engagement Platform (obsolete) | ? | Standalone package |
FDK | ? | Standalone package |
FrameMaker | 12 | Standalone package Technical Communication Suite |
Font Folio | 11.1 | Standalone package |
Illustrator | CC (17) | Standalone package Creative Suite |
InCopy | CC (9) | Standalone package |
InDesign | CC (9) | Standalone package Creative Suite |
Adobe Color | N/A | color |
LeanPrint | N/A | Standalone package |
LiveCycle | ES3 (10) | Standalone package |
Muse (Code Name) | 5 | Standalone package |
Omniture line of products | N/A | N/A |
Ovation | 1.0 | Standalone package |
Presenter | 10 | Standalone package eLearning Suite |
Primetime | 2.0 | Standalone package www |
RoboHelp | 10 | Standalone package |
SpeedGrade | CC | |
Story | CC Plus | story |
Source Libraries | ? | ? |
Visual Communicator | 3 | Standalone package |
Different Types of Websites
Your Internet Service Provider or Domain Registrar may offer you free server space for you to create your own website that might include some family photos and an online diary. Usually these will have a web address (URL) looking something like this: www.your-isp.com/~your-user-name/. This type of site is useful for a family, teenagers, grandparents, etc. to stay in touch with each other. This type is not advisable for a small business because the URL is not search engine friendly and the limited server capabilities your hosting company offer may not be sophisticated enough for a small business website.
2. Photo Sharing Websites
These types of website are cropping up like fleas on dog. There are web sites like, Flickr.com, Photosite.com, and Google's Picasa. There could easily be over a hundred such sites that offer free photo sharing paid for by their online advertising. Also, many digital cameras and photo printers now come with software enabling mere mortals to create digital photo slide shows and upload them to the web. Most smart phones have apps to accomplish the same ends.
3. Writers / Authors Websites
Writer's and Author's websites are part of what's known as the Writer's or Author's Platform in the publishing business. The platform includes, a website, a Facebook presence, blog, Twitter account, and the old fashioned mailing list. Many publishers will ask a prospective client about their platform. In other words, "If we publish your book, what sort of a reader base do you already have that we can count on to buy your new publication?" Fairly weighty request, wouldn't you say? For now, let's concentrate on the website part. A writers website would include a biography, a catalog of published books and works, perhaps excerpts from some works, links to publications on sites like Amazon.com, a link to the writer's blog, reviews and comments on the author's publications. You get the idea, and that is to build a following, a fan base to which future publications can be directly marketed.
4. Community Building Websites
Social Websites, Forum Websites, and Sharing Websites.
These websites build online communities of people who want to interact with other people socially or meet people who share their interests. The best known website of this type is probably FaceBook.com. There's also Linkedin.com, and let's not forget the old MySpace.com just to mention a few.
For sharing and discussing mutual interests, there are online forums for practically any subject you can think of. These Forum websites can be a great source of information and help for the small business person. (I'm sure there is a forum dedicated to your type of business. Just do a web search for something like real estate web forum.) Now you can see this is where we start to get into the idea of "hybrid" sites.
Photo Sharing and other forms of sharing sites might also be considered community building sites, much as Blogging sites are. Can Dating Sites be considered Community Building Sites, or are they E-commerce Sites. All that's up for discussion.
5. Mobile Device Websites
The use of mobile devices (smart phones, tablets, watches, etc.) has become ubiquitous. One problem is that standard websites are difficult to view and sometines take a long time to download on some of these devices with their small screens and wireless connections. Websites whose pages are narrower in width and take up less bandwidth work much better for mobile devices. A new domain designation has been created to identify websites that are "mobile friendly". That is .mobi, as in www.xislegraphix.mobi, if I had such a site. If you have a small business that would benefit from being viewed on a mobile devise, you should consider investigating the possibilities of creating a mobile friendly site.
6. Blogging Websites
People took the words Web Logs and shortened it to Blogs—online diaries, journals, or editorials, if you will. My, how Blogs have taken over the Internet. A person used to be outdated if he/she did not have a website, now having a blog is de rigeur. A blog owner will log-on daily, weekly, or whenever, and write about whatever is going on in their lives or business, or they may comment on politics and news. How wonderful the Internet is! Now anyone who can afford a blog can be self published and allow their thoughts to be read by anyone in the world who has online access. How important is blogging to the small business person?
Read more about blogs and find out...
7. Informational Websites
A major informational site is wikipedia.org, the online encyclopedia. And it is unique, because it allows members to contribute and edit articles. Now your small business may not want such a comprehensive site, but if you have information to share or sell, an informational website would fill the bill. Suppose you have a landscaping business. You could create a website that lists plants with their definitions and planting and caring instructions. This would be helpful to people, and you would use it to lead people to your nursery. Of course you could "hybrid" this site by adding an e-commerce feature, a forum, or even photo sharing.
8. Online Business Brochure/Catalog Websites
In the days before the Internet, we used the print, radio, and television media to spread the word about our businesses. Now we can cast a large net, reaching literally millions of people al over the world with just one website. With your online brochure or catalog, you can show anyone who looks for and finds your website, photos and descriptions of your products or services. To some this may sound like an E-commerce Website, but there are many businesses that deal in products or services that are not sellable over the web—think hair-stylist, dentist, or day-care center.
9. Directory Websites
Just as we used to use the printed Yellow Pages in phone books to find services and businesses, today we have website directories. The Yellow Pages has one, YP.com. Directories can be dedicated to a certain topic or industry, or they can encompass geographical areas. Search Engines, such as Google.com and Yahoo.com can be considered directories, but since their databases are so large, rather than searching alphabetically, one enters a search term in the search field.
10. E-commerce Websites
Ever hear of Amazon.com? It's one of the grand-daddies of all e-commerce websites. But you don't have to be an Amazon to sell your products online. There are millions of small businesses who use their e-commerce websites to sell their products over the Internet. Just about anything that can be sold in a brick-and-mortar store can be sold online—with much less overhead! Is an E-commerce Website right for you?
from http://www.xislegraphix.com/website-types.html
Different Kinds of Microsoft Office
Word
Main article: Microsoft Word
Microsoft Word is a word processor and was previously considered the main program in Office. Its proprietary DOC format is considered a de facto standard, although Word 2007 can also use a new XML-based, Microsoft Office-optimized format called .DOCX, which has been standardized by Ecma International as Office Open XML, and its SP2 update supports PDF and a limited ODF.[7] Word is also available in some editions of Microsoft Works. It is available for the Windows and OS X platforms. The first version of Word, released in the autumn of 1983, was for the MS-DOS operating system and had the distinction of introducing the mouse to a broad population. Word 1.0 could be purchased with a bundled mouse, though none was required. Following the precedents of LisaWrite and MacWrite, Word for Macintosh attempted to add closer WYSIWYG features into its package. Word for Mac was released in 1985. Word for Mac was the first graphical version of Microsoft Word.
Excel
Main article: Microsoft Excel
Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet program that originally competed with the dominant Lotus 1-2-3, and eventually outsold it. It is available for the Windows and OS X platforms. Microsoft released the first version of Excel for the Mac OS in 1985, and the first Windows version (numbered 2.05 to line up with the Mac and bundled with a standalone Windows run-time environment) in November 1987. It provided more functionality than the previous version.
PowerPoint
Main article: Microsoft PowerPoint
Microsoft PowerPoint is a presentation program for Windows and OS X. It is used to create slideshows, composed of text, graphics, and other objects, which can be displayed on-screen and shown by the presenter or printed out on transparencies or slides.
Access
Main article: Microsoft Access
Microsoft Access is a database management system for Windows that combines the relational Microsoft Jet Database Engine with a graphical user interface and software-development tools. Microsoft Access stores data in its own format based on the Access Jet Database Engine. It can also import or link directly to data stored in other applications and databases.
Outlook
Main articles: Microsoft Outlook and Microsoft Entourage
Microsoft Outlook (not to be confused with Outlook Express) is a personal information manager. The replacement for Windows Messaging, Microsoft Mail, and Schedule+ starting in Office 97, it includes an e-mail client, calendar, task manager and address book.
On the Mac OS, Microsoft offered several versions of Outlook in the late 1990s, but only for use with Microsoft Exchange Server. In Office 2001, it introduced an alternative application with a slightly different feature set called Microsoft Entourage. It reintroduced Outlook in Office 2011, replacing Entourage.
OneNote
Main article: Microsoft OneNote
Microsoft OneNote is a freeware notetaking program. It gathers notes (handwritten or typed), drawings, screen clippings and audio commentaries. Notes can be shared with other OneNote users over the Internet or a network. OneNote was initially introduced as a standalone app that was not included in any of Microsoft Office 2003 editions. However, OneNote eventually became a core component of Microsoft Office; with the release of Microsoft Office 2013, OneNote was included in all Microsoft Office offerings before eventually becoming completely free of charge. OneNote is available as a web application on Office Online, a Windows desktop app, a mobile app for Windows Phone, iOS, Android, and Symbian, and a Metro-style app for Windows 8 or later.
Different Kinds of Software
Software is the language of a computer. And like human language, there are many different computer languages. Essentially, computer software can be divided into three main groups depending on their use and application. These are system software or operating system referred simply as the OS, application software and programming languages. Usually most of us interact with a computer using application software.
1. System Software: System software or operating system is the software used by the computer to translate inputs from various sources into a language which a machine can understand. Basically, the OS coordinates the different hardware components of a computer. There are many OS in the market. The most popular Os are from the stable of Microsoft. We have all heard, used and wondered at the Windows software, which is an OS. Starting with Windows, Microsoft has migrated to Vista, its latest offering in the market. It may come as a surprise to some that there are other operating systems used by others. Among these UNIX is used for large office setups with extensive networking. XENIX is software which has now become redundant. HP -UX and AIX are some operating systems used by HP computers. Apache OS is quite popular with web servers. IBM still uses proprietary operating systems for its main frames. Proprietary systems are generally built with the help of a variant of UNIX operating system.
2. Application software: A normal user rarely gets to see the operating system or to work with it. But all of us are familiar with application software which we must use to interact with a computer. Popular examples of application software are the Microsoft office suite which includes Word, Excel and PowerPoint. We have used these applications extensively. Internet explorer, Mozilla Firefox is two applications used to access the internet. E-mail software like Outlook express is used to manage Emails. It is obvious that all software utilized for working on a computer is classified as application software. In fact all user interfaces are an application. The anti-virus is an application and so is the Media player.
3. Programming languages: Now this is a kind of computer software which is used exclusively by computer programmers. Unless we are also programmers, we are unlikely to come across programming languages. A simple way to understand programming languages is to think of them as bricks which can be used to create applications and operating system. C++, Java and Simlab are some popular programming languages. Generally Java is used for internet applications. C++ is a language of professional developers and used extensively in developing operating systems. PHP is another language used for internet applications. There is a new class of languages which are being utilized for the mobiles. These are light weight, modular languages which are used to design mobile applications.
Computer software falls under three basic categories; System software or operating system, application software and programming languages. We usually use applications on a day to day basis. These applications are themselves created using programming languages.
from http://www.streetdirectory.com/etoday/different-types-of-computer-software-jjwap.html
Different Types of Computer
A computer is one of the greatest inventions of man and it has seen many changes in functions, memory space, size and portability. What makes the computer an extraordinary apparatus is its ability to store and process a massive amount of information, which is used to perform various technical tasks or even help create other gadgets.
As technology continues to progress by leaps and bounds, it is not surprising that the computer has been modified into different shapes, with varied features and a wide range of purposes.
Let us take a look at the different types of computers which will help us understand their functions and what they are used for.
Personal Computer or PC – A PC is a computer that is used by someone for his personal use. It is a complete system in itself and its convenient size, price and simple functions make it easy for the end-user to work on it without any intervention from computer operators.
Desktop – Any PC that is designed to be placed on a desk and not for portability is called a desktop. Such computers are kept in a somewhat permanent location and can be a little bulky. They usually have more power and storage compared to their movable counterparts.
Laptop or Notebook – A PC that can be moved around is called a laptop. It gets its name from the fact that you can keep it on your lap and use it. It is also called a notebook because you can carry the battery-operated device to classes or meetings conveniently and store any notes or information in it. It integrates the monitor, keyboard, pointing device, CPU, memory and hard drive in one system.
Netbook – This is similar to a laptop, the only difference being that it is smaller in size, which makes it even more portable. It is also less expensive and performs the basic functions, but its internal parts are not as powerful as a desktop or laptop.
Workstation – This computer is a desktop which is larger, consists of a more powerful processor, greater memory space and extra ability to do specific kind of work. Such a computer is used by programmers, game developers, video or sound editors and graphic designers.
PDA – A Personal Digital Assistant is a small, highly integrated computer usually using flash memory for storage instead of a hard drive. It uses touchscreen technology and doesn’t have a keyboard. Those which use a digital pen for input are called handheld computers. It is light, portable, has good battery life and fits within your palm, because of which it is also called a palmtop.
Server – The server’s main purpose is to provide certain services to other computers or a whole network of computers. It is much larger than any average computer and generally a whole room is necessary to fit the whole server. It has powerful processors, additional amount of memory and bigger hard drives.
Mainframe – Mainframe computers are used by large companies and organisations to perform critical tasks that involve bulk data processing like transaction processing, census information, statistical data and so on. They consist of extensive input and output facilities, are very stable and dependable and handle millions of transactions every day.
Supercomputer – This type of computer processes data much faster than a regular system. It is the leader in processing capacity and costs millions of dollars. A supercomputer is used for sensitive and calculation-intensive work such as scientific research, physical simulation, climate studies, oil and natural gas exploration, weather forecasting, quantum physics, to name a few.
Wearable Computer – This device is worn on the body like a watch or visor and is often used by military professionals or doctors to track human actions if their hands are engaged in other activities. Smart watches and fabric PCs are examples of wearable computers.
All these types of computers serve a different purpose but there are a few things common in all of them, that is, they help us save time and aid in achieving accuracy in our work. From occupying a whole room to fitting in our pocket, the computer has indeed come a long way. And the best part is that in spite of so many developments and differences in features, it’s journey has just begun, as the possibilities of what they can do are limitless.
from http://typeslist.com/different-types-of-computers/
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