Microsoft: Expression Not an Adobe Competitor

By Nate Mook | Published April 30, 2007, 7:24 PM

FROM MIX 07 Microsoft on Monday officially began shipping Expression Studio, the company's new product suite for building what it calls "next-generation user experiences" for Windows as well as the Web. Expression targets the new breed of designer that is also part developer.

Expression was largely created to help companies build applications that take advantage of the new Windows Presentation Foundation found in Windows Vista. Microsoft hoped the rich application capabilities would draw users to Vista, but developers have been slow to build such experiences.

A core tenet of Expression Studio is that developers are often forced to design the external interface along with the code underneath. And the end result is often less than stellar. Right now, it's just too difficult or expensive to develop a good user experience, Expression product manager Wayne Smith told BetaNews. "We're targeting these people we like to call des-devs. They do a little of both."

Expression Web, which shipped on its own in December, is now joined by Expression Blend, Expression Design and Expression Media. The retail package additionally includes Visual Studio .NET 2005, along with hours of training videos.

Formerly known by the code-name "Quartz," Expression Web replaces Microsoft FrontPage, which has largely been reincarnated as SharePoint Designer and is included in Office System 2007. Microsoft is endeavoring to target professional Web designers with Expression Web, and has removed features that relied on FrontPage Server Extensions in Beta 1.

Although Expression was first publicly introduced in 2005, Microsoft's intentions to build a platform for rich applications on Windows and the Web dates back half a decade, when Vista was still known as Longhorn and Microsoft talked up its new database-driven WinFS file system that would never arrive.

Seeing the success of Flash on the Web, Microsoft snagged a number of Macromedia developers and began work on "Sparkle," which later was unveiled as Expression Interactive Designer and eventually renamed to Blend. While it utilizes vector graphics like Adobe's Flash, Blend is entirely about interfaces.

In order to enable the development of graphics for building Sparkle-driven interfaces, Microsoft acquired the Expression brand from Creature House and released "Acrylic," which was thought at the time to be a planned competitor to Adobe's Photoshop. Acrylic creates 2D and 3D images that can be outputted into the XAML file format that is natively supported by Vista's Presentation Foundation. Since its debut, the product was renamed Expression Graphic Designer and has now been shorted to just "Expression Design."

Expression Media, meanwhile, is a re-branded version of iView MediaPro, an asset management tool that includes a visual catalog for keeping track of digital media such as images, fonts, sounds and videos. Microsoft says it will "maintain the product" and keep the Mac OS X version alive. Adobe offers a similar tool called Bridge.

Despite the similarities between Expression and Adobe's Creative Suite, Microsoft doesn't see the products as direct competitors. Microsoft says the products ultimately fill different roles and target distinct groups of developers. However, the company admits that a little competition is good for the future of the Web.

It's clear, however, that Expression is critical to Microsoft's future moves both on Windows and the Web. Microsoft's Smith says that in the near future, user interfaces and overall experiences are going to change drastically, and he expects to be "shocked at how quickly" people begin making use of these new tools.

Already, Microsoft is working on the next version of Expression, as evidenced by a "May Preview" release of Blend 2 on Monday. Blend 2 was released specifically to enable developers to take advantage of the Silverlight 1.0 Beta. The goal for the next iteration of the complete suite, says Smith, is to make the products more accessible to designers by requiring less code be written.

Expression Web can be purchased on its own for $299 USD, with a $99 USD upgrade for FrontPage users. Expression Blend runs $499 USD and includes a copy of Visual Studio Standard, while Expression Media is priced at $299 USD, and free for iView Media Pro customers. Expression Design will only be available as part of the full Expression Studio suite, which is priced at $599 USD.

Comments

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I've used Expression v1 from Fractal Design and v3 from Creature House as well as the free download from Microsoft. I'm trying out the new v4 (so far, I don't see many changes in the feature set)

"Did Creature House's Expression come from the old Metacreations's Expression which directly competed with Illustrator and Freehand? That was one cool-ass app at the time that I never got to try."

Metacreations, and Fractal Design before them, licensed the program from the developers at Creature House in Hong Kong. Microsoft bought Creature House, IP and personnel.

"It wasn't a competitor to Illustrator and FreeHand, since it didn't didn't try to offer a complete range of vector tools--it just offered a way to recreate natural media strokes with vectors. Sort of a vector version of Painter."

Hmm. Yes, you could and can put natural-media strokes on your lines and define your own strokes, either vector or bitmap, but you still have freehand, pen, and Bezier lines for open and closed strokes. You have basic shapes. You have node, line, shape, and group editing tools (warp group is fun). Expression supported transparency effects from version 1, and you can set the transparency on stroke and fill separately. Fills can be solid, gradient, vector, or bitmap. You can define blending modes on shapes.

It isn't an Illustrator or Freehand clone, no. But it has some wonderful stuff in it.

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It's all very exciting. Looking forward to see it in action....

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Did Creature House's Expression come from the old Metacreations's Expression which directly competed with Illustrator and Freehand? That was one cool-ass app at the time that I never got to try.

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It wasn't a competitor to Illustrator and FreeHand, since it didn't didn't try to offer a complete range of vector tools--it just offered a way to recreate natural media strokes with vectors. Sort of a vector version of Painter.

You can still try it. Microsoft was offering version 3.0 as a free download, but I couldn't find it on its site anymore. I did find it at:

http://thesource.ofallev...re-house-downloads.mspx

I've never read an explanation of why Microsoft felt it needed to buy this little niche app and use the name (and probably some code) for something completely different. I suppose the original Creature House Expression will no longer be maintained, and I don't know of a replacement.

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"It's not a competitor; it's a beater!"

/Ballmer crap

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well, considering the prices of expression is $299-$599 and CS3 creative suite is $999-$1799, in many ways they're not competing in the same area.

It's like wii. vs. PS3.
Although, adobe got the upper hand for now, definitely.

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if it drives the prices of adobes products down, im all for it. the more affordable the software is for the end user, the more it allows small businesses to adopt legal copies and lower their overhead. small businesses need all the help they can get.

just my $.02

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Give me a break... "not a competitor" = "please don't judge our poor results head to head against Adobe's vastly superior platform penetration, since we're filling a niche".

Nonsense.

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im sure the presumption is it can be pushed to 90-100% of the windows market within 3 to 5 years via windows releases and automatic updates

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