Adobe is looking for beta testers for its web design software, which it claims removes the need for coding.
Aimed at graphic designers with limited technical skills, Muse claims to make it possible to design complex websites using point-and-click and drag-and-drop rather than hand coding.
Adobe is aiming for a full release of the software in early 2012, at which point you will need to pay a subscription. Prices are expected to start at $15 a month.
The software works on Lion – with some bugs, Adobe said – but is not certified to run on Linux. Adobe said it would welcome bug reports from anyone trying the program on open-source operating systems, but it could not commit to fixing them.
Adobe said the name of the program may also change; Muse is just its code name.
Beta testers will also need to have Adobe's AIR installed. Adobe is also offering web hosting.
(Source: theregister.co.uk)
Adobe has introduced an auto-updater for its Flash software packages that reduces the chore of updating the widely-used application by automating the process for all supported browsers on ...
READ MORE
Adobe warned users of its Reader software earlier this week that hackers were using a critical vulnerability in the program to enable "limited, targeted attacks." Today security firm ...
READ MORE
Ad giant Google is also considering snapping up mapping software firm Waze, which could spark a bidding war with Facebook over the business.
Sources whispered to Bloomberg that Google was ...
READ MORE
Controversial Chinese software vendor Qihoo 360 has its eyes on world domination after controversial founder Zhou Hongyi told the local press he wants to turn the firm into ...
READ MORE
Ring in open source and cloud apps, ring out old packaged software. That's the message relayed by Peter Yared, CTO for CBS Interactive, at this ...
READ MORE
Adobe auto-update eases Flash update chore – on
Espionage network exploiting Adobe Reader flaw
Internet advertising giant (Google) ‘mulls’ map app Waze
China’s internet security giant Qihoo planning global domination
CBS tunes in to open source, cloud