Product
Review:
Ragtime 5
by Mitchell Levine
Those of us
old enough to recall probably remember the famous
Apple commercial featuring the slogan “Macintosh: why 1984 won’t be
like (Orwell’s) 1984.” The spot, aired
during the Super Bowl of that year, reflected a belief
common at that time: personal computers can empower
the individual by offering them capacities once exclusive
to the well funded. Unfortunately, it seems that,
in some ways, this concept never genuinely came of
age.
True, we all
use computers these days, and they do allow us
to accomplish many things we otherwise wouldn’t.
On the other hand, it appears that many of us use
them in exactly the same ways. With a few exceptions,
for example, the overwhelming majority of people
do their word processing with Word; their spreadsheets
with Excel; their slideshows with PowerPoint; and
their databases with Access.
Of course,
a craftsman’s creativity
isn’t strictly limited by their choice of tools.
Michelangelo and Botticelli both used a chisel, and
that didn’t force them into blind uniformity.
But it seems strange that the public’s usual
demand for novelty hasn’t asserted itself in
the applications software market. Microsoft distributes
a fine office suite—I use it myself—but
at an average market cost of about $500, it’s
hard to believe that some viable alternative hasn’t
been available.
Thanks to
Comgraphix’s Ragtime
5, one now is. The first thing to praise about the
package is the price: any registered student with
a valid idea, or educator with an institutional purchase
order, can purchase the education version of the
product for only $95—a deep discount off of
even Microsoft’s similar program. The next
is that it’s, crucially for IT managers in
the schools and unlike MS Office, cross-platform,
running equally well in Windows XP and OSX.
The key to
the software’s operation
is it’s unique distribution form: unlike most
suites, it’s not configured in individual stand-alone
modules, but rather allows its user to access its
components from within a single document. Thus, not
only can the end-user take advantage of first-rate
word processing for an individual text project, but
at the same time add graphics, graphs, forms and
multimedia without ever leaving the program. Spreadsheets
and animations can be integrated, and at the same
time, Applescript macros can be coded to automate
various repeated tasks. Certain types of layout functions
are available, like scale and rotations, and text
can be flowed around multiple columns in a similar
(but not quite so intuitive) fashion as Quark or
InDesign.
To be fair,
it took me a bit longer to feel comfortable with
Ragtime than my standard word processing software,
and I, of course, used the latter to write this
review. However, that learning curve shouldn’t negate the serious advantages,
power, and affordability of this well-designed productivity
option for education-based applications users. For
more information on this product, or to check requirements
for education license shares, log on to the company’s
site at www.comgraphix.com.#