Users are also sure to appreciate Suitcase Strip, a new Apple Control Strip module that puts font management on your desktop, and a handy Collect for Output function that bundles all the fonts used in your document for sending to your service bureau. One of the most-compelling new features is auto-activation: Suitcase 10 automatically opens fonts as needed. Though available in both Mac OS and Windows versions, this latest version of Suitcase is thus far available only for the Mac. As such, I was pleased to find that the $99.95 Suitcase 10 actually offers better font management than what I was used to with ATM Deluxe. For those of us who tend to install a lot of different fonts for a variety of projects, font management seems pretty important. I’ve never had anything against the program, but I always install Adobe Type Manager on my machines to provide font rasterization, and the deluxe version of ATM has always provided all the font management that I need.Īll that’s about to change, though, with Adobe’s announcement that it will not be updating ATM Deluxe for either OS X native or Classic environment compatibility. ![]() ![]() To be honest, until this review came along I hadn’t used Extensis Suitcase since version 1.0, some time in the late ’80s.
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