
Devs are trying to aproach kids or youngsters that want to put dialogue balloons over pictures, but out there are professionals looking for options to substitute laptops with iPads or use iPads as a sync devices for later on use.ĭont let Adobe think about that first. Then I found another app with more professional aproach: Strip Designer for iPad, it needs work also but it let me design in a professional way and it let me buy fonts for professional use, that means I can buils a comic that later on can be sell online without licensing problems.

It need rulers and a lot of obvious tools to be able to work on something real here. I'm a cartoonist, I was looking for a tool that let me design a comic book to later be sync with my computer in any format posible. I expect Plasq to make their usual incremental improvements.Ī.Kinng - It's just a toy. I did run into a few problems with the program quitting unexpectedly, but didn't lose anything. The iPad version doesn't offer the wealth of output formats as the desktop version (you can't make a high-resolution TIFF or a multi-page PDF), but you can quickly create a flowchart that will wow your database administrator, or a five step plan for upgrading your phone system, or illustrate how to use the new photocopy machine.Īnd if you have no interest in doing anything practical, you can simply take photos off your iPad, turn them into funky comics, and E-mail them to unsuspecting relative, friends and coworkers. Mix in some random, often incomprehensible photos, add in some thought balloons and speaking balloons, an occasional "Zap!" or "Pow!" or "Ka-ching!" and you can turn a briefing on reimbursable expenses into something exciting.

You can make the ritual less painful by using Keynote, but it is still fairly predictable, and a cure for insomnia.īut Comic Life can revolutionize this experience. One of the most brain-dead corporate and government rituals is the multi-media briefing, which usually means: PowerPoint slides.
