A basically good experience, but has weak points that need to be addressed.
Over the last few months, I've grown to like Paligo. I still don't like it as much as I could, but that has potential to change.
Let me start with the negatives:
1. As an experienced Technical Writer, it's fairly obvious to me that Paligo was created by Developers, for Developers. How many Technical Writers were consulted in the process of development?
In my line of work, I find I need to emphasise again and again that many Technical Writers, particularly those like me who come from a non-IT, multi-disciplinary background, do not have extensive experience in XML, and our attention is already spread thin enough that we do not have the time or inclination to devote ourselves to mastering XML. We are writers, not coders.
We're very nearly in 2019, guys. The era of having to fine-tune content by hand-coding in HTML and XML should have ended long ago!
2. Having to toggle between the Content Manager and a document's Structure view to build document structures and sub-structures is also a pain. In Word 2010 onward, you have the option to manipulate a document's structure directly through the Navigation view.
3. Another thing that really grates me is editing a document and not immediately knowing what I'm going to get in terms of a workable result. This particularly applies to image sizing - In Paligo, you have to manually specify the size of each image by entering a set value, if you don't want the image to default to the size specified in the Layout template. But how many people are able to say offhand, with any accuracy, that an image with a width of 250-point is going to occupy a known amount of space on an A4 page?
MS Word has the option of clicking-and-dragging to re-size images. Paligo needs a 100% representative WYSIWYG editing view - not just more WYSIWYG editing controls.
4. Speaking of WYSIWYG controls, Paligo needs a much wider selection of them. MS Word is the standard-bearer in this regard, and has been for eleven years now. There is no excuse not to learn from that.
Falling back on a user's skill at XML is a cop-out.
5. I don't know if any other Paligo users would concur, but for me, an offline Paligo application would be fantastic.
I'm based in South Africa. Here, we pay a premium for internet connections that are of sub-standard speed, bandwidth and reliability. Service interruptions are frequent, and when they happen, it would be great to continue to use Paligo uninterrupted, having it upload all edits when service is resumed.
6. There are also some infuriating bugs that cause relevant content to be hidden and/or irrelevant content to be shown in Review mode. This causes unnecessary friction between authors and reviewers by making it seem as if the author's fact-checking was sub-standard.
On the plus side, and discounting what I've said above, Paligo is a vast improvement over Adobe Framemaker.
A major bonus is that when I change the locations of resources such as images or topics, Paligo never breaks internal links to those resources. This is a major area in which Framemaker falls flat, and was a problem at my last job to the point where it influenced the layout of my documentation.
20 november 2018
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