Yesterday I was very excited to try out Blurb’s book layout software, BookSmart. It looked like exactly what I wanted to create a beautiful, high-quality photo book from my wedding pictures. Almost as soon as I found it, I signed up for Blurb and was emailed a download link. I had a lot of trouble downloading it from their site, but I chalked that up to weird bandwidth problems and was eventually able to get it downloaded and installed on my Mac last night. Strike one against the software already–it shouldn’t take hours to try and download a 30 MB file. Still, I was excited to get started and I fired it up, anticipating a night of creation–instead I got a night of frustration.
BookSmart is a GREAT concept. Blurb is definitely on the right track with what they’re offering. However, the execution leaves something to be desired. BookSmart is laggy and frustrating. It’s a Java-based application and it took almost a full minute to open. That’s two strikes against it before I’ve even been able to use it! When I finally got into the program, I was expecting something like creating a book in iPhoto, only more customizable and with a lot more bells and whistles. What I got was something about ten times as frustrating as iPhoto, which made the customization not feel worth it.
Not everything about BookSmart is bad. It has good integration with your existing iPhoto library–as long as the files are the right format. I had to export my wedding photos to JPG (they were in TIF) so that I could use them with BookSmart. This rendered my meticulously organized iPhoto albums pretty useless to me. BookSmart can also integrate with Flickr and other online photo galleries, as well as pull content from blogs.
My patience with the program came to an end before I got past creating the front cover. I couldn’t imagine creating twenty more front and back pages of photo and text content at the slow pace I was being forced to move at. When I would drag an image to a location on the page layout, it would take upwards of 20 seconds to load and display. I realize that I am using an older Mac, but I have the RAM maxed out and rarely experience problems even with the latest and greatest software. Perhaps a native application could work a little better, perform a little smoother, and create a better user experience. Strike three, BookSmart. I’m out.
In comparison, the iPhoto user experience is great–it’s easy and FUN to create books, cards, and more from your iPhoto library. It’s incredibly intuitive and natural. My beef is with the cost of the iPhoto books, which is significantly more expensive than a service like Blurb, and with the lack of true customization for people who want more than a canned theme might offer. I’m going to continue to try to find a happy medium between ease of use and customization, but I’m pretty bummed about Blurb.
Daily Tech Diva
















4 Comments Received
March 25th, 2009 @11:08 pm
so in another word, don’t use blurb ?
April 6th, 2009 @9:36 am
Booksmart software has been great. It downloaded immediatley, and has been simple and fun to set up and create. I have since done 2 books and sent out some as presents which have been received with praise. I highly recommend this program.
April 24th, 2009 @8:01 pm
This software flat out stinks. I’ve been working on a 40 page book on this and everything you pointed out is what I’m going through. It freezes literally every 3 seconds so something as simple as moving the type cursor will be a chore. If you’re just going to plop in photos, this software is fine. If you intend to have text as well, be prepared for MAJOR frustration.
June 20th, 2009 @11:17 am
Ditto. The download of Booksmart was fast, and that was the last fast I saw. I’m looking at a soft-cover book of 150 pages, and the Booksmart application is just not going to cut it.
Something has changed. I built and printed a book using earlier versions of the Mac OSX and Booksmart, and it was palpably fast.
Now, with new versions of both, the Booksmart app is disgustingly slow. I’m on the verge of deleting the app and trying for a book-publishing service elsewhere.
Really — it’s like using PageMaker in 1992 on a Commodore.
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