Microsoft axes Digital Image Suite
Microsoft is discontinuing one of its products, and I'm bummed.
Having one less piece of software to write about is no big deal, but this particular program happens to be one I actually used--a lot. Microsoft's Digital Image Suite served as my introduction to photo editing and photo manipulation. I've since taken to using both Photoshop and Photoshop Elements, but just this week I installed Digital Image Suite on the Windows portion of my iMac so I could keep using it as well.

A picture of some orangutans I took at the San Diego Zoo, after some magic with Microsoft's Digital Image Suite
(Credit: Ina Fried/CNET News.com)
Microsoft noted the change with a
"Microsoft has discontinued its line of Digital Image Suite products," the software maker said. "Many of the digital imaging features and tools that have been enjoyed for years now can be found in new Microsoft titles and services including Windows Vista."
Windows Vista's built-in photo organizing program does mirror some of the album features of Digital Image Suite, but offers few of the program's editing abilities. The move should be a bit of nice news for Adobe, whose Photoshop Elements now has a little less competition, though Microsoft is stepping further on Adobe's toes in plenty of other areas.
As for Digital Image Studio, Redmond says it will continue to sell the copies that are already in stores and will support the product through April 30, 2010.
For more photos, click here.
During her years at CNET News, Ina Fried has changed beats several times, changed genders once, and covered both of the Pirates of Silicon Valley. These days, most of her attention is focused on Microsoft. E-mail Ina.
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product. Get yourself a copy of Corel's Painter (Which Corel sucked
the heart and soul out of, but...) and see where Microsoft came up
with all of their "innovations".
Adobe software for digital imaging. Microsoft Publisher is a joke,
our high volume printing company does not even accept Publisher
files. Or Corel Draw for that matter. Those programs are fine if
you're making a scrap book at home. But if you want professional
results in digital imaging of ANY kind... stick with Adobe.
DIS was really nothing more than a cheap shot at established digital image suites.
To succeed in production markets, the users need to have reasonable confidence the product will be around for generations (i.e. Photoshop, Illustrator, Freehand, etc.) to justify investments in training, hardware accelerators, etc.
MS uses that strategy for Office, why can't it seem to apply the same common sense to its other products.
The ImageSuite is not the best picture maker but it was good enough and a lot of people liked it.
I use Excel every day (at work) and version 10, or whatever the current version is, is not nearly as good as version 4 or 5 say. The graphics are so dumbed down as to be useless. All user control is gone.
Thank goodness there is software that works, is supported, and cannot be bought from Microsoft.
If it is really good, they will kill it.
Bummer.
Thank You