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I went to the Apple booth and took a full tour of iWeb. iWeb is basically a good application - it just needs to be made to work out of the box and be developed in the same way as its main competition. Pretty impressive stuff - there's also a blog tool complete with an RSS feed generator. He populated his pages with photos from his iPhoto library, a podcast he created in the new Podcast Studio inside of Garageband, and a movie he dragged and dropped from iMovie. However, after a little while, the limitations will become apparent and that’s where Apple wants you to pay up for the professional application.

Most people will be very happy with what they produce.
Apple iweb review for mac#
Jobs used iWeb's Apple-designed, pre-fab templates to build a website in just two minutes during his keynote address. I previously owned a copy of iLife05, but iLife06 had features included in it that I have been waiting for mac to come out with. Like most of the other iApps, success will come very quickly with iWeb. The maximum brightness is a reasonable 290cd/m2 and the contrast ratio is given as 800:1. Turns out that it's actually a fairly robust personal WYSIWYG web editor. Image quality on the 20in screen is good and the glossy finish gives the screen the right amount of impact. We speculated last week that iWeb was going to be a publishing tool for content created within the iLife suite. Also expected, but still shrouded in mystery until 10AM today, was the newest addition to the iLife suite, iWeb. As expected, there were Intel notebooks, an Intel iMac, and a revamped iPhoto and Garageband. Macworld kicked off today in San Francisco with Apple CEO Steve Jobs announcing the company's newest hardware and software products.
