It looks like it's the end of the road for Microsoft's suite of Expression design tools, as Peter Bright over at Ars Technica notes. Expression Design 4 is being phased out entirely, though it will be ...
Expression Design 4, Microsoft’s vector graphics design tool, has been quietly killed and is no longer available for sale nor will there be any new versions developed by Microsoft. The software is now ...
Microsoft has quietly announced that its Expression suite of Web and design-oriented tools is being killed off and phased out. Vector graphics drawing tool Expression ...
Microsoft is shipping the first of four components in its new Expression Studio user experience design and development suite, with plans to ship the remaining three in the second quarter. The ...
As Microsoft pushes to ready a suite of new design tools for offer under the Expression Studio brand, the company announced late last week that it is shipping the second beta release of the third of ...
Microsoft released on Monday a free early version, or "community technology preview," of its Microsoft Expression Web Designer, used for building Web sites. It released early editions of the other two ...
Microsoft Thursday unveiled a version of its toolset for Web and multimedia designers that includes the first native support for its Silverlight technology across all of the products in the suite.
REDMOND, Wash. — Dec 4, 2006 — Microsoft Corp. today announced significant product line enhancements along with pricing and availability of the Microsoft® Expression® Studio for creative professionals ...
Multimedia developer Jered Cuenco calls it the “gray box application” phenomenon: when a developer, befuddled by a graphic designer’s computer-drawn mockups and unclear instructions, comes back with a ...
eSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly ...
Redmond is focusing on efforts to extend Visual Studio and Azure instead. i doubt someone at microsoft decided, "let's give up on design." more like, "this is underperforming, so let's axe it." they ...