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Correct answer Preran

Like I promised, I checked with the senior management about the future of Dreamweaver, and their answer was that they see no reason to stop developing the product. Dreamweaver will continue to exist, period.

I understand that no amount of reassurance will suffice, but I do want to put other Dreamweaver users visiting this post at ease.

I am marking my answer as correct only because I want this question to be addressed upfront for visitors that will not care to read the rest of the discussion. If any of you feel strongly against that, let me know, and I will take care of unmarking it.

Thanks,

Preran

11 replies

john stephanites
Known Participant
April 7, 2018

DW is pretty much useless at his point.

pziecina
Legend
April 7, 2018

https://forums.adobe.com/people/john+stephanites  wrote

DW is pretty much useless at his point.

That's true, but it is still a much better option than Muse now.

john stephanites
Known Participant
April 7, 2018

Not when there are sites like Webflow. The reason for Muse was an easy non code way for designers. If you look at things like Webflow then you understand just how much Adobe failed.

Inspiring
March 29, 2018

I am still surprised Dreamweaver is still well Dreamweaver. At least in the sense of its name, is it still Dreamweaver otherwise ;-) ? Sure it was once a flagship app (maybe still is) and the branding and marketing aspect is obvious. But I can only imagine Adobe still feels Macromedia remains a thorn in its side. I honestly figured by now it would not be called Dreamweaver still. They had to be happy to rebrand Flash to Animate. Not much left prominently from the Macromedia days, I often wonder what could have been had the merger never occurred. ;-)

B i r n o u
Legend
March 30, 2018

certainly that homesite will still be around....

Preran
Community Manager
PreranCommunity ManagerCorrect answer
Community Manager
March 28, 2018

Like I promised, I checked with the senior management about the future of Dreamweaver, and their answer was that they see no reason to stop developing the product. Dreamweaver will continue to exist, period.

I understand that no amount of reassurance will suffice, but I do want to put other Dreamweaver users visiting this post at ease.

I am marking my answer as correct only because I want this question to be addressed upfront for visitors that will not care to read the rest of the discussion. If any of you feel strongly against that, let me know, and I will take care of unmarking it.

Thanks,

Preran

pziecina
Legend
March 27, 2018

I read through the announcement about Muse again, then read through a number of discussion regarding the discontinuation of Muse.

Given that the statement says

  • Designers that are actively engaged in creating complex websites and applications are investing in UX design and prototyping skills while partnering with development teams to bring their designs to life.
  • For simpler websites, we’ve seen the emergence of Do-It-Yourself (DIY) website creators that leverage customizable templates to quickly create responsive websites that can be easily modified by the designer or a client.

I'm a little confused, as to me Muse is nothing more than a paid for DIY website creation tool, and what is being said about Adobe Spark (the pre-release version) makes it also nothing more than a DIY website creation tool. So that part simply does not add up.

As for the first part of the reason given by Adobe that I quote. I read that as Adobe is going back to its roots, and catering for the larger team, in that they are talking about ux and prototyping being the designers role in web development.

So apart from my 'answer' of 'would it really matter', I find myself asking just where Dw fits in with the Adobe world view?

It is not being used by most Ps extract users, many smaller site developers do prototyping in the browser, (or live view), UX design is not really part of development for someone using bootstrap, (its a take it or leave it option), and in the announcement Spark is recommended for newsleters.

If Adobe is going back to its core product user, the Dw simply does not fit in.

pziecina
Legend
March 26, 2018

@BenPleysier

I must be a little slow today, as I have only just realised who is asking the question .

I don't know if Dw cab is still going, but as you were/are a member, shouldn't you be telling us the answer?

BenPleysier
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 26, 2018

pziecina  wrote

@BenPleysier

I must be a little slow today, as I have only just realised who is asking the question .

I don't know if Dw cab is still going, but as you were/are a member, shouldn't you be telling us the answer?

It's called NDA . But seriously, I have no idea.

Wappler is the DMXzone-made Dreamweaver replacement and includes the best of their powerful extensions, as well as much more!
ALsp
Legend
March 26, 2018

It's called NDA . But seriously, I have no idea.

That could stand for No Dreamweaver Announcements.

ALsp
Legend
March 26, 2018

Muse is/was free. It has little or no bearing on Dreamweaver because of that reason. It also is a very badly designed application. We explored it with a mind to doing extensions, and had a few good laughs. If Dreamweaver has retained anything from its Macromedia days it is that of a really good file/site management tool. It is also a container for powerful extensions that can make Dreamweaver, much better than what Adobe delivers. CS6 will be usable, at least on Windows, for a very long time, so the fact that Adobe has no clue how to evolve Dreamweaver is of little consequence... for now. The folks that regularly post on this forum are not typical Dreamweaver users and probably should be using other editors, if they are not already. But Muse, and the other free apps that Adobe has produced are nothing more than an institutional advertisement to show Adobe's altruistic side. Perhaps the people who run Adobe have not yet gotten the memo that free always comes with a cost... sometimes unexpectedly high.

mbk28
Known Participant
March 26, 2018

Muse is not free

Legend
March 26, 2018

Fireworks was an exeptionally good simple, web editing tool, that didnt stop Adobe killing that.

I started to explore Brackets, which l personally thought could have been a very good code editor but l decided not to invest time in it because currently it requires expanding upon and l don't think that will ever  happen, as Al says these kinds of programs are pet projects for bored Adobe engineerrs that almost certainly have no legs.

Abobe is building a reputation for being very unreliable.

Inspiring
March 26, 2018

As expected it's not a pretty sight over in the Muse Forum right now ....

EDIT: Yippie post moderation is back!

pziecina
Legend
March 26, 2018

I don't really have very much sympathy with Muse users, except in that the alternative recommended product, (Adobe Spark) is not ready for use, and has no real info available.

The ones I feel sorry for are the BC users, as trying to convert BC code to another server-side code for anything more than a small site, could be a very large undertaking, and the question of 'who pays' for what, is one I would not like to ask a client.

Legend
March 26, 2018

pziecina  wrote

I don't really have very much sympathy with Muse users

I think my words of wisdom in terms of how important it is to be able to code has been vindicated. Without it you are literally in the hands of someone elses decision making.

Inspiring
March 26, 2018

That is a surprising turn of events.

Or is it? Given that Adobe cant seem to wisely forecast past their nose what to do, focus on or develop. Muse, Edge, and on down the line of failed applications and workflow endeavors. So many hours, months years wasted repeatedly by Adobe. All the while their core flagship products sink into despair for the lack of any real innovation or keeping up with the times.

What the *@#$%;-) are they even doing ? Oh yeah thats right, collecting Cash Cloud payments, they no longer need to worry about things as long as the marketing works and enough people buy in.

pziecina
Legend
March 26, 2018

Is Dw the next to go?

The question I would ask is, "does it make any difference"?

Adobe announced last year in a video conference that it intended to rationalise its product line-up, and concentrate on its core products. Reading the reasons why in the Muse announcement, the dropping of flash content and other Adobe 'product' plug-ins by browsers, add to that the steady demise of other Adobe web releated products, then all I can say is, "watching the development of Dw over the last few years, has been like watching a train crash in slow motion".

B i r n o u
Legend
March 26, 2018

yep... I agree... and I will add when reading your question "Does it make any difference"... maintaining or not DW developement wont change anything... currently more and more users leave DW... for old versions or alternative solution...

on prerelease there are I think 4 active person... and one message a week... so one can't say that there is any effervescence... just hey we add this... can you test ? please ?... but except marketing... non one ask for this add

so keeping dw on board or not... wont change anything...

pziecina
Legend
March 26, 2018

My way of looking at it is, so long as I have my cd with CS6 and I can write extensions to up-date the code support, CS6 will be all I require. I have even put off upgrading my computers internals and checking that I can roll-back windows 10 up-dates, just to make certain it still runs without problems.

Maybe that is the problem with Dw, CS6 is so easy to extend with self built or paid for extensions, that for web development the CC versions, (all products required for the web) simply did not offer enough to make the cost worthwhile.

As for the pre-release, the Dw team and a number of cab members are responsible in my opinion. Telling participants not to criticise, to leave if they don't use Dw, ignoring participants posts, and that modern w3c spec support is not required. Is not the way to encourage participation.

As for server-side, Dw killed that off itself years ago.

Impressive_play01AC
Inspiring
March 26, 2018

Dreamweaver is already dead for several years... most users use the old CS6, definitely not the last two versions (2017/2018).

For Adobe Muse and Business Catalyst I think the reasons for their closure is to be found in drastic changes at the web development level in recent years, WordPress has become the reference point (at least here in Italy), the companies themselves ask for it and most of them look for ready-to-use templates/websites.

B i r n o u
Legend
March 26, 2018

where are you from in Italia ?

Impressive_play01AC
Inspiring
March 26, 2018

https://forums.adobe.com/people/B+i+r+n+o+u  ha scritto

where are you from in Italia ?

Vicenza, city in northeastern Italy (Vicenza - Wikipedia )