I thought I’d post my first impressions of Opus 6. My initial survey of the new features has impressed me enormously.
I should start off by saying that I'd almost given up on using Pro XE5.5 because I was finding it difficult to manage two issues that were key to my current project: presenting data graphs and handling frequent updates.
The project I'm building needs to pull data from varied online official sources and present these in engaging graphical form, but all of the users won’t have always-on connections. I'd been struggling with using swf data charting and hit a wall when I realised that it was going to be difficult to scrape, process and display ever-changing data.
The easiest technique I found was to process the stats, then generate and upload these to my webserver, then show them in a browser viewport in the publication. Fine, except some of my customers won't have broadband. My net-enabled publication design just did not implement well without a broadband connection.
With the new partial update feature I plan to modify my design so that I can offer updated content modules as one-off downloads for customers who don't have always-on broadband. Great stuff.
As if that weren't good enough it looks like I can use the new graphing script features to generate graphs from a publication database or from webserver data.
So in one stroke DW may have solved two of my three biggest problems. I now have to re-design my publication in light of these new features, but it looks as if it could be time well-spent.
My third concern was Mac OSX output, but I some time ago decided to launch my pub for Windows only. So that's all three problems sorted.
I've built a prototype in Runtime Revolution, but found it too reliant on extensive scripting for most of the functionality I needed. I am minded now to stick with Opus for my project; I hope to go to market before year-end.
Congratulations to Paul and the team at DW on some superb software engineering! Your competitors must surely be thinking of shifting into the catering, or any other, business, as it looks unlikely they'll catch up with Opus

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Brian