PC Review Online reviews PhotoWebber 2

"Myself, I use Photoshop extensively for web page creation. PhotoWebber has become a real godsend. It is easy to use, fast and does a great job. The HTML code it creates is quite good and when I need to do some tweaking, I can easily load it in to Dreamweaver.

PhotoWebber is simply the best solution for graphic intensive web sites. "

www.pcreviewonline.com

 

 

MacUser give 4 mice to PhotoWebber 2

"Designers often use Photoshop to prepare initial designs for Web sites. PhotoWebber takes this a stage further and automatically builds a fully functional Web page from the Photoshop file...

For the end user, PhotoWebber is blindingly easy to use."

http://www.macuser.co.uk

 

 

MacDesign says "Simplify Web Design" (4 out of 5)

In operation, PhotoWebber imports an entire Photoshop file for conversion into a Web page, or works from a new file and imports graphics individually or from selected layers of a Photoshop file. By turning on and off layers, an entire Web site could be constructed from a single Photoshop file using PhotoWebber. - Jim Patterson

www.macdesignonline.com

 

 

Team Photoshop says "PhotoWebber delivers on its claims..."

"What PhotoWebber promises to do is simply amazing. The program delivers on its claims to let you create individual web pages, provide realistic site prototypes for clients to review online, and design and test site layout and rollover button ideas - all without writing a single line of HTML or JavaScript code. This program is of particular interest to us Photoshoppers, because you do most of you web page design right in Adobe Photoshop. For thos of you graphic designers who know Photoshop like the back of your hand, but have been unwilling or unable to get seriously into web site design, your opportunity has arrived. You really don't need to know much more than Photoshop to create web pages and sites with this program."

http://www.teamphotoshop.com/stores/software/pw_review/pw_review.php

 

 

About.com asks "Can a Photoshop file really be converted into a web page in just one minute?"

"Media Lab claims that PhotoWebber can take a completed design from Photoshop (or any graphics program that supports layers) and convert it into a fully functioning web page in one minute... In short, Media Lab's claims are true. Here's an account of my first-time user experience..."

http://www.webdesign.about.com/compute/webdesign/library/weekly/aa111000a.htm

 

 

iBoost.com gives PhotoWebber "4 Geeks"

(4/5 Geeks)

"If you're looking for a tool that can take your cool Photoshop layout, layers and all, and convert it into a fully functional Web page with rollover effects in five minutes, then look no further."

http://www.iboost.com/build/software/reviews/photowebber/10013.htm

 

 

webreview.com says PhotoWebber "really is as easy as 1-2-3."

"I couldn't believe PhotoWebber could possilby be as easy as the Media Lab's press release made it sound, so I decided to put it through the paces...What I discovered was nothing short of amazing. PhotoWebber produced an instant Web page from my PSD file in 3 steps - keeping the layers, transparencies and objects in the correct positions."

http://www.webreview.com/pub/2000/09_29/designers/09_20_00_4.shtml

 

 

 

Photoshop User Magazine gives PhotoWebber 4-1/2 Stars

"As an experienced print designer, I've shied away from technologies with which I have little familiarity. Hence, I've avoided getting into Web design. When I saw the demo of PhotoWebber from Media Lab, Inc., I realized at last my solution to Web creation angst was at hand."

September/October 2000 issue. Read the whole review (PDF - 162K).

Find out more about Photoshop User Magazine at www.photoshopuser.com.

 

 

Internet Eye Magazine names PhotoWebber a Best Product of 2000

"If you do a lot of web related production work and are tired of converting your Photoshop files into jpg's and fighting alignment and the other many tasks it takes to get a good web page then look no further than Media Lab's PhotoWebber. It is fast, friendly and takes all of the guess work out of creating fantastic and professional web pages without having to know a lot about HTML coding or scripting of interactive buttons."

http://the-internet-eye.com/reviews2000/Aug/PhotoWebber/DEFAULT.HTM

 

 

 

Builder.com

"PhotoWebber ends that old argument between designers and coders over layout precision: should a page be designed with browser flexibility in mind, or should it look exactly as designed, requiring intensive cross-platform and browser checking? With PhotoWebber, the designers win. Users have total control over the representation of their Web designs, without needing the programming skills to build for the Web."

http://www.builder.com/Reviews/PhotoWebber/?tag=st.bl.3880.rev.bl_PhotoWebber7

 

 

New Media

"For any designer who's agonized over whether or not a Web page mocked up in Photoshop could actually be rendered in HTML -- or who just wants to quickly bridge the gap between initial design and fully realized Web page--help is on the way."

Awesome Product of the Week, April 27, 2000

http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=857

 

 

 

Step-By-Step Graphics

"Wouldn't it be great to push a button and output a web page from Photoshop? If this sounds like wishful thinking, think again. Media Lab has just released PhotoWebber 1.0, a standalone program that not only performs all of the above tasks, but gives graphic designers one more tool that just might change the way web development is done today."

Read the whole review.

July/August 2000 Issue, page 16

 

 

MacCentral

"You really have to see this thing to appreciate the miracle it performs. Media Lab was showing a pre-release version at PhotoshopWorld back in April and it was the hit of the show."

"Why this is such a time saver is that many professional Web designers, comp up what the want their site to look like in Photoshop. Then they have to dissect the whole thing, and reassemble it, piece by piece in a Web authoring app, but with this, you bypass the authoring app and go straight from Photoshop to the Web."

http://www.maccentral.com/news/0006/14.kelby.shtml
http://www.maccentral.com/news/0006/21.kelby.shtml
http://www.maccentral.com/news/0004/04.photowebber.shtml

 

 

MacToday

"Photoshop Web designers rejoice! Did I mention - NO SLICING! This sucker's more autmoatic than a Ronco Turn-N-Peel."

May/June 2000 Issue, page 43

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