Click on any phrase to play the video from that point.
[ADOBE CREATIVE SUITE 5.5 DESIGN PREMIUM]
[BUILD DIGITAL MAGAZINES WITH INDESIGN CS5.5 AND ADOBE DIGITAL PUBLISHING SUITE]
[Terry White] Hello and welcome to the brand new Creative Suite
Design Premium CS5.5.
My name is Terry White, worldwide design evangelist for Adobe Systems
and it's my pleasure to not only walk you through some new features
in InDesign CS5.5, but also in this particular case,
the new Digital Publishing Suite from Adobe.
Now, of course, with InDesign CS5.5, you have the ability to create publications
for print, interactive publications for the web,
and now, interactive publications for tablet devices such as the iPad,
the multitude of Android devices like the Motorola Xoom,
and of course, the PlayBook.
So with that in mind, let's take a look at how this whole workflow works.
So let's start with an InDesign document that I have open here.
I'm going to go ahead and scroll through it, and as you might notice,
I'm in my Interactive Workspace.
And of course, the Interactive Workspace is not new to CS5.5,
but there is one new important addition and that is the addition of the Overlay Creator.
With the Overlay Creator, we can take objects that are seemingly static on the page
and we can turn those into interactive objects for tablet devices.
So, for example, I have this--again, it looks like a still photo--
but actually when I open up the new Overlay Creator panel,
we can see that this is set to be a 360 degree view.
That's right--it's basically the photograph of the bike
at 360-degree increments or angles
that we can now go ahead and make interactive.
And again, I get to control all of that inside of InDesign CS5.5.
So for example, I can choose what will be the first or initial image.
I can choose whether or not it plays on load,
so the minute the person swipes to that page, the bicycle will start spinning around.
Or I can choose to have the person swipe through it,
tap the Play or Pause, so forth and so on.
So again, with this Overlay Creator, I can build upon the tool set
that's already in InDesign CS5 with CS5.5
and make things interactive directly inside my InDesign document
so that they go out to tablet devices.
So for example, if we continue scrolling through this,
one of the other examples here is that we have a photograph
that is really a slide show.
When we click on this and we look at our object states
which were introduced in InDesign CS5,
we have the ability to take multiple objects and stack them together,
but now, with the Overlay Creator, we have the ability
to turn that multiple-stack object or the object states
into a physical slide show.
So again, you control how it works.
Do they tap it and it just starts to play?
Do they swipe through each photo?
Do you set up buttons that change the states?
It's all up to you with InDesign CS5.5.
So let's go ahead and scroll through this content
and one of the other things that we can see here--there's another slide show
or actually the ability to zoom in.
So in this case, we have a photo that we can see the photo zoomed out,
but what if you wanted to actually zoom in on the artwork?
Well, if we click on this photo--and again, we go to the Overlay Creator--
we have the ability to choose a Pan and Zoom.
So if I choose Pan and Zoom, then the user will be able to tap
and the photo will zoom up to its full resolution and pan their way around
inside the photo directly on their tablet devices.
So with that, there's one more thing I want to show
before we actually go and look at it on the iPad,
and that is this interactive map, or this interactive display.
Now, in this case, we've done something pretty clever
using some of the features that were built into InDesign CS5
and of course, building upon those features in CS5.5.
We have another object state here,
and again, stack of photos, but in this case,
instead of swiping through or having a slide show play,
what I'd love the user to be able to do
is tap on different pinpoints of the map
to show that location's photo.
So in other words, each one of these is a button
all set up in InDesign and the button is set to go to a particular state
of the object stacks.
So with that, we can have the user tap
to go to a specific spot and actually show that spot right on the tablet device.
So now that we've seen how to build the interactive publication in InDesign,
what if you wanted to test it first?
What if you wanted to make sure it was doing exactly how you programmed it
or set it to do inside of InDesign?
You want to test your interactivity; you want to test that map to make sure it all worked.
Well, instead of having to load it on to the device first to test it,
we're introducing the Adobe Content Viewer for your desktop.
So with that, I can go ahead and switch over to the Content Viewer.
In the Content Viewer, you can just drag and drop your .folio file
right into it--the one that you produced from InDesign--
and your mouse becomes your finger at that point.
So I can flick up to go to the next page,
I can interact with that bicycle that we talked about,
and so you can see that it is areal, 360-degree revolving bicycle.
Also, if you have an internet feed--in this case, I have an internet Twitter feed
loaded on the right-hand side, so that will come in and allow me to test that as well.
And again, we can flick up, we can play the video that was on this page here.
And again, we have the ability play that video inline or full screen.
Let's go ahead and go up, and as we saw before,
we have the ability to tap--and this was, again, just the slide show that's playing automatically.
And remember the Pan and Zoom?
Well, we can click, zoom and pan in on that photograph,
so it's working exactly as I indicated from the InDesign document.
We're able to test it first, so from here I can actually tap the pinpoints
so that we can see the images change from each tap on the map.
So now that we've seen it in InDesign, we've built it in InDesign.
We've seen it in the brand new Adobe Content Viewer.
Now let's take a look at how this look on a device like the iPad.
So here I am on the iPad, and I'm just going to go ahead and launch the free Adobe Viewer.
This is available on the App Store so you can download it today.
Once the viewer comes up, I see my document, so just go ahead and tap View.
And again, the same experience that we saw in the Content Viewer.
I can flip up to go to the various pages.
I can interact with the content,
such as the bicycle that I can spin around.
This is working great.
I also have the table of contents, or the thumbnail that we saw there earlier,
and large and flip up here.
We have our video.
And again, we're playing the video inline,
but of course, using the Overlay Creator,
I can also have that video play full screen.
So I can tell it what to do inside of InDesign CS5.5
and of course, that translates to the tablet device
both horizontally and, of course, vertically.
So let's go ahead and come out of full screen on that.
We'll go ahead and pause it, and you noticed I'm horizontal now,
but I can continue reading my content, reading my document.
So we can tap to play the slide show,
and again, this was the slide show that we set up in the Overlay Creator
that's just going to autoplay when the person taps on it.
We can also go to the photo that we want to zoom in on.
We can tap the photo and it will load the larger version
that we can pan around, we can pinch and zoom.
And this, again, was a popular request; people wanted to be able to zoom content
inside of their digital publications.
So again, my favorite page in this spread or this publication: the interactive map
where you tap the pins on the map to change the photo.
So we can go to the map, we can tap on different pins
and see those spots on the map--the actual photos that represent those locations.
As you can see, we have taken the content that we started with in InDesign CS5.5
and we took it out to ePUBS earlier--eBooks.
And now, we've taken it to a digital publication
using the Overlay Creator to add the interactivity
for tablet devices that allow a touch interface, such as the iPad,
or the multitude of Android devices or the PlayBook.
The Adobe Content Viewer: the same content, one document publishing out
to multiple formats, multiple devices, and of course,
it's the Creative Suite Design Premium CS5.5
that is powering all of this technology
and you should get your hands on it today.
So thanks again for watching. My name is Terry White.
[ADOBE CREATIVE SUITE 5.5] [ADOBETV] [tvadobe.com]
