Audience

Newspapers and magazine companies

About Atex Desk

Multichannel Content Management Platform. Desk is a web based solution to manage the production of digital and print publications for newspapers and magazines. Leading publishers such as JPI Media in the UK, La Stampa in Italy and Newsday in the US have implemented their digital-first publishing strategies using the Desk platform. Desk enables the whole content production lifecycle via customizable workflows, picture desk functionality, video management and a dynamic metadata management framework with automatic content tagging features. A flexible environment to author and prepare content for online and offline publishing. Break the channels barrier using the same tool and the same workflow to prepare articles for both web and print. Full digital enrichment with galleries, multimedia, embeds, links, maps etc – no compromises. Super easy and super fast. Manage even the most content rich homepages, with concurrent multi-user access, alternative guided layouts for home page zones.

Integrations

Ratings/Reviews - 1 User Review

Overall 1.0 / 5
ease 1.0 / 5
features 1.0 / 5
design 1.0 / 5
support 1.0 / 5

Company Information

Atex
Founded: 1973
United States
www.atex.com/products/desk/

Videos and Screen Captures

Atex Desk Screenshot 1
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Product Details

Platforms Supported
SaaS

Atex Desk Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What kinds of users and organization types does Atex Desk work with?
Q: What languages does Atex Desk support in their product?

Atex Desk Product Features

Content Management

SEO Management
Version Control
E-forms
Audio Content
Website Management
Image Editor
Text Editor
Document Indexing
Video Content
Customizable Templates
Full Text Search

Desktop Publishing

For Newspapers / Magazines
HTML Import / Export
Multiple Editing Layers
Object Snapping / Grouping
Image Editing
For Printing
Handles Database Formats
For eBooks
Templates
PDF Export / Import

Publishing and Subscriptions

Layout & Design
Catalogs
Advertising Management
Newspapers
Newsletters
Books
Circulation Management
Campaign Management
Magazines
Content Management

Atex Desk Reviews

Write a Review
  • An Atex Desk User
    Sub Editor
    Used the software for: 2+ Years
    Frequency of Use: Daily
    User Role: User
    Company Size: 10,000 - 19,999
    Design
    Ease
    Features
    Pricing
    Support
    Probability You Would Recommend?
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

    "Unfit for purpose"

    Posted 2023-07-11

    Pros: I've been doing this job for over 20 years and Desk is by a country mile, the single worst editorial system I have ever had the misfortune of having forced upon me, and I am comparing this directly with the first system I used back in 2002, which was a totally command-driven system operating under MS DOS, but had 80% more flexibility and functionality.

    Cons: Constant, and almost ceaseless crashes, lock-ups, errors and freezes.
    Slow to the point of ridiculousness. Takes forever to open pages, edit copy, load in pictures etc. And it usually takes several attempts to load things in as the first few attempts invariably fail.
    Extremely limited functionality. No method of changing the point size of text, no method of changing text colour, no method of kerning, tracking options extremely limited. Picture cropping tools are a total and complete joke - and that's on the rare occasions they actually work.
    Every single function and event generally requires multiple mouse clicks and opening multiple screens to achieve, there are no shortcuts, no workarounds. In most situations it's required to have several iterations of Desk open in different browser tabs simply in order to do your job.
    Horrible, buggy, unintuitive user interface.

    Overall: The overall experience is one of sheer frustration, 'computer rage', and the desire to throw one's laptop out of the nearest window. Desk is a broken, buggy, nightmarish mess to use and is COMPLETELY UNFIT FOR PURPOSE.
    To think that not so long ago I had my own Adobe InDesign, and could actually do my job properly and intuitively, sorting out any problems with pages as I worked.
    Now all the control I previously had has been taken away. I cannot directly interact with page elements, and any problems that occur must be sent on to a third party who have InDesign to sort out.
    Even simple operations such as the need for a second picture box, or a landscape pic to be made into portrait are now beyond my capability - unless I wish to go through the convoluted rigmarole of unassigning all content, killing off the template, trawling through the system for a more suitable template, loading it in, loading the story back onto the page blah blah - though of course 8 times out of 10 there are no suitable templates!
    So sum up, Desk has made my job into an unpleasant, frustrating, chore.
    Operations that would have previously taken me around three minutes now can take anything upward of 20 minutes or even longer - radically increasing my workload and working hours.

    Read More...