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Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard

Apple iWork '06 (Mac DVD) [OLDER VERSION]

Apple iWork '06 (Mac DVD) [OLDER VERSION]
From: Apple

List Price: $79.00
Buy New: $39.50
You Save: $39.50 (50%)



New (5) Used (4) from $25.00

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 34 reviews
Sales Rank: 2011

Format: Dvd-rom
Platform: Mac Os X
Media: DVD-ROM
Edition: Standard
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Operating System: Mac OS X
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2
Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 5.2 x 1.1

MPN: MA222Z/A
Model: MA222Z/A
UPC: 885909089772
EAN: 0885909089772
ASIN: B0007LW23A

Release Date: January 18, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Create eyecatching three-dimensional charts, tables with calculations, freeform shapes and photo.
  • Pages 2 includes mail merge, auto-correction, and new Page
  • Keynote 3 features stunning new animation effects, a Light Table view, and tools to help you rehearse, present, and publish with ease.
  • The powerful new features in iWork ‘06 make it easy to get just the look you want.
  • Create beautiful documents and cinema-quality presentations in minutes with iWork ’06, including Pages 2 and Keynote 3.

Similar Items:

  • Apple iLife '06 (Mac DVD) [OLD VERSION]
  • Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac Student and Teacher [OLD VERSION]
  • Parallels Desktop 3.0 for Mac [OLD VERSION]
  • Mac OS X Version 10.5.4 Leopard
  • Apple iWork '08 [OLD VERSION]

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
iWork 06 lets you choose an Apple-designed template, then add your own text, charts, tables, shapes, and iLife photos, movies, and music. Create eyecatching three-dimensional charts, tables with calculations, freeform shapes and photo masks, and more. Pages 2 includes mail merge, auto-correction, and new Page Thumbnails and Search views. Keynote 3 features stunning new animation effects, a Light Table view, and tools to help you rehearse, present, and publish with ease. The powerful new features in iWork 06 make it easy to get just the look you want.

Amazon.com
iWork '06 features two powerful applications for creating everything from school newsletters to business presentations. With Pages 2, you can quickly create a wide variety of stunning documents. With Keynote 3, you can produce cinema-quality presentations, storyboards, and more. iWork '06 lets you express yourself with style.



Pages 2 helps you create stunning documents quickly and easily.


Choose from beautiful document templates.


Reviewer comments make it easy to collaborate.
Pages 2
Introducing Pages 2. Thanks to new text and image editing tools, it's the easiest way to look good in print. Use Apple-designed templates to build stunning documents in minutes. Quickly add photos with the built-in iLife Media Browser. Format your text in minutes with elegant predefined styles. Add punch to your page with multiple columns, self-calculating tables, and engaging 3D charts.

Add modern design -- Start with a template in Pages 2 and your document is halfway to gorgeous. Choose from 25 new templates, including posters, flyers, scrapbooks, folding cards, technical reports, business invoices, proposals, screenplays, and storyboards.

Top the charts -- Pages 2 lets you add beautifully designed 3D charts to any document. Edit your chart, then position it perfectly using the 3D rotation wheel. From there, you can add even more depth and realism by applying multiple lighting styles, angles, reflections, and shadows.

Get in shape -- Explore your options with curves, shapes, and masks in Pages 2. Choose from new shapes, insert the one you like best, then customize it by adding points or sides. You can even create custom shapes using new Bezier curves. When you're done creating the perfect shape, you can use it to mask any photo in your document.

Put it on the table -- Leave it to Pages 2 to make mere tables more interesting. Add text, graphics, and photos to tables, then get ready to do the math: tables in Pages 2 let you perform spreadsheet-style calculations without ever leaving your document -- a perfect solution for adding numbers late in the game.

Sign, seal, deliver -- Never again fear the mail merge. Pages 2 boasts seamless integration with Mac OS X Address Book, so creating personalized documents for individuals or groups is suddenly simple. Stationery templates offer predefined Address Book links: all you do is drag in contacts and Pages automatically personalizes your documents to match.

Thank you, notes -- With new reviewer comments in Pages 2, you can take notes. Type reminders, to-dos, or revision notes right on your document. Every comment you make appears in a handy sidebar that won't affect layout or pagination. Plus, you can easily hide comments so they won't clutter up your document and keep you from the important business of writing, editing, and printing.



Keynote 3 offers the easiest way to create stunning presentations.


Choose from beautiful presentation templates.


Wow your audience with beautiful transitions and effects.
Keynote 3
Grab and hold your audience's attention with Keynote 3, the latest generation of Apple's stunning presentation software. Perhaps you'd like to make a business proposal. Highlight the quarter's results for investors. Dazzle viewers with your photos of the southwest. Whatever your story, make it into an exquisite presentation with laser-sharp graphics.

Captivate any audience -- Transitions and effects in Keynote 3 help you build cinema-quality presentations. New transitions give you more choices for transporting your audience from slide to slide, flexible text animation puts your words in the spotlight, and interleaved builds offer additional options for every element in your slides.

Enjoy variations on a theme -- Themes in Keynote 3 include everything you need to maintain a consistent look and feel throughout your presentation. Keynote 3 offers eye-popping new HD themes ideal for high-definition displays (1920x1080 resolution), as well as new themes for standard-definition displays. Plus, themes now include a coordinated set of textures and colors designed for 3D charts, and master slides with bulleted text in multiple columns.

Shape your slides -- Add some artistic influence to your presentation, thanks to 10 different shapes in Keynote 3. Choose from stars and polygons, then customize your shapes by adding points and sides. And if you can't find the perfect shape, new Bezier curves let you personalize existing shapes or create your own from scratch. When you're done shaping up, you can easily mask a photo using any standard or custom shape.

You can compute -- With room for text, graphics, and photos, tables in Keynote 3 let you perform simple, spreadsheet-style calculations without leaving your slide. That means you can change your presentation on a dime -- even if final data arrives late.

Duly noted -- Note to self: let Keynote 3 help you organize your thoughts with new reviewer comments. Leave yourself presentation pointers, jot down a list or two, even incorporate feedback from rehearsals. These handy comments behave like sticky notes, so they're easy to write, edit, and move around on your slides. Plus, they disappear in presentation mode, keeping everything clutter-free.


Customer Reviews:   Read 29 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars The problem with iWork   February 12, 2006
Eddie
72 out of 82 found this review helpful

On the positive side the software is easy to use, and lets users create professional looking documents.
On the negative side, it has not truly become the "next" AppleWorks as it was originally described. AppleWorks users such as myself never saw any spreadsheet or database features in iWork. Another thing we never saw was an upgrade price. I'm a registered AppleWorks user, and registered the original Keynote and iWork '05 as well. The original Keynote was promising but mediocre. With iWork '05 Keynote was MUCH better, and Pages was disappointing. iWork '06 seems to bring many bug fixes and improvements which in my opinion should have been a free update. Once again, there has not been any upgrade path for previous users.
This will probably make my review "not useful" for many readers, but I will say that I'm happier with Microsoft Office 2004. The bottom line is that I've used Word and PowerPoint more often than iWork (probably 98% vs. 2%). iWork is attractive because it is initially cheaper and is fairly easy to use, but after my experiences with the software I'll wait for iWork '07 or iWork '08. Office may be more expensive, but for me it has been a better value since it also includes Entourage and Excel, and it is a more useful tool that I use on a daily basis.
For people who are buying iWork for the first time, or only need presentation/word processing/layout software, it may be worth it. I learned the hard way not to purchase Apple software in their initial releases, and that disappointment -added to the lack of upgrade pricing- makes this version not worth it for me.



4 out of 5 stars Gret For New Users - Updaters Beware   March 7, 2006
Bruce Aguilar (Hollywood, CA)
63 out of 65 found this review helpful

iWork contains both Pages 2 (a word processing/page layout application) and Keynote 3 (a presentation application). These apps are designed to work as intuitively as iTunes, iPhoto and the other applications from the iLife suite. In fact both Pages and Keynote are fully integrated with iLife so adding files from any of the iLife applications to a Pages or Keynote document is as easy as drag and drop.

I mainly use Pages and have created newsletters, envelopes, flyers and personal letters. I'd estimate I worked an average of 20 to 30 minutes on the flyers I have created, and most of that time was spent on the actual text of the document. Similar projects with all the formatting, colors, images and boxes, have easily taken me double that time using Word and AppleWorks.

Pages let you export your document in Word, PDF and HTML formats, however I have found that the exported files sometimes don't perfectly mirror the original. Drop shadows didn't appear and positioning was slightly off. Keynote has similar exporting problems. If you need to share actual files with others, the exporting problems in iWork will give you quite a few headaches. Thankfully, I'm printing out all my documents or sharing them with other iWork users.

The iWork interface is seamless and beautiful and offers many useful templates. These templates are so good that I'd like to se even more of them included. But if the templates don't offer what you're looking for then iWork lets you customize them to your tastes/needs or else create your very own templates from scratch. A few of the included templates give me a bit of lag when using them but it's nothing egregious. Aside from that minor quibble the only complaint I have is the trouble I have exporting my files to other formats.

If you routinely create letters, flyers or presentations, then you owe it to yourself to pick up iWork. Why? Well, iWork works hard for you by expanding your options and helping you create beautiful projects in a fraction of the time it would take with other software. And it does it all with a pleasing visual flair.

However, users thinking of upgrading from iWork '05 should perhaps wait for the next version of this package since nothing that new has beeen inturoduced this time. About the only new feature added to iWork '06 is support for basic table functions. The rest of the additions are new templates and effects, that while georgeous, don't improve or add to the functionality of either application.



5 out of 5 stars Great replacement for Microsoft Word, for most purposes   July 11, 2006
M. Jason (Northern California)
18 out of 18 found this review helpful

I was stunned when I started using Pages v2... because I'd been convinced that Apple would never get a word processor right. AppleWorks pretty much sucked (tedious interface, limited capabilities, never fully updated for Mac OS X). TextEdit is nothing more than a rough draft of an application.

Pages, by contrast, does everything I need for letters, how-to documents, meeting notes... that is, everything that I want a word processor for (as opposed to a text editor, like BBEdiit).

The feature set in Pages is limited compared to Word. For example, there are collaboration tools, but not as refined as Word's. But for my needs -- personal document creation -- the feature set is perfectly adequate. In fact, I love it: flexible nested bulleted lists; great header and footer support; great style support; beautiful layout; export to PDF, Word, and HTML; multiple columns; comments; custom templates... and lots more.

But what makes me love Pages, even more than the features, is the very clean, very discoverable interface. In fact, I wish the Mac OS X Finder were as well conceived as Pages. And the Pages interface leaves Word's interface in the binary dust.

(Not that I had trouble with Word. I've used it for many years and had figured out how to do whatever I needed to. But Word, as much as it was refined version-to-version and improved for Macintosh users, always felt a little hostile to me.)

Pages, on the other hand... Between the easily customizable Tool Bar and the elegant Inspector window and the sane menu structure, I really enjoy coming up with reasons to create a Pages document. Even the online help for Pages is exemplary. I've always been able to find an answer to my questions.

Well done, Apple.



5 out of 5 stars Keynote Superior to PowerPoint from designers   May 5, 2006
L. Craig (Colorado Springs)
16 out of 17 found this review helpful

I am a graphic designer and use Keynote to develop multimedia presentations.

Here is how I use it:

* I create a Keynote presentation(s) with text and photos and transitions. When using a lot of text, still photos, graphics etc., you can create amazing presentations far superior to PowerPoint with look of templates, ease of use, ability to control transitions. It's superior if you want a superior finished product. These presentations can be used alone or you can go beyond a "slideshow" into the realm of iMovie/iDVD.
* Export as full-quality QuickTime movie
* Import QT movie into iMovie
* Combine video with Keynote presentation(s) and add audio (you can add audio in both Keynote and QuickTime, but you have a lot more control in iMovie).
* Next I import the iMovie into iDVD, create a menu page and have a sensational, inexpensive multimedia presentation

As for Pages. As a 21 year Mac user, if all I had was Publisher (which is not available for the Mac anyway) or Pages to create good looking newsletters and flyers, then I would choose Pages any day. I would never use Word. Word is not a page layout program---that's why they have Publisher. However, as a graphic designer I use inDesign which costs about 8 times as much as Pages and Keynote combined. I hate to say it but Amazon's price for iWork6 of $73 is basically the upgrade price. Apple made it cheap to start with and you will more than get your money's worth. I'm not sure if you need to upgrade if you don't already love the program.

Another tip: Buy Robin William's book, The Non-Designer's Design Book, follow her suggestions and start making everything you do look better.



2 out of 5 stars Nice product ruined by poor PDF support   January 4, 2007
Mr. Pen (Prairie Village, KS USA)
13 out of 15 found this review helpful

I've used iWork for a number of projects including my wedding invitations which were sent to a professional printer and a Quicktime slideshow for job interviews. Both Pages and Keynote are fairly intuitive applications with sleek features allow home users to produce some very nice documents and presentations.

Both applications come with some fantastic templates, though I was disappointed not to find a large collection of user-created templates online.

Pages, in particular, was what I was most interested in, having familiarity with--but not the budget for--both Quark Xpress and InDesign. However, I discovered a major problem with Pages that made the program so unreliable that I'm now very reluctant to use it for anything that will be shared. After producing dozens of resumes in Pages, exporting them to PDF format, and mailing them to potential employers, I ran into a few that would require me to mail a hard copy.

For some reason which I can no longer recall, I decided to print these resumes at a nearby 24-hour print center. So I exported the PDFs, emailed them to the print center, and when to pick them up. Unfortunately, the printouts were a garbled mess of nonsensical characters. So I tried again, but got the same results. Surely this problem was due to the fact that the print center was printing the documents using PCs and not Macs, I thought. But when I opened the documents on my Mac using Adobe products like Reader or Illustrator--rather than Preview--I found that the problem was not limited to PCs.

After a short time on Apple's support pages, I found others with the same problems and there was no patch or update available to fix it. I can no longer trust Pages to produce documents used by anyone other than myself and shudder to think how many of my resumes and cover letters were disregarded when the receiving party was only able to view a mess of random characters. Shame on Apple for not releasing a fix for this known problem in iWork '06 and I can only hope that it will be taken care of in '07.

EDIT: After reading the comment which said that the PDF problem is system-wide and not iWork specific, I've upgraded my rating to **** from **. I'd probably give it 5-stars if some reliable cross-platform export solution had been present (like a reliable PDF export).



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