Anybody who uses and relies on Quark 6.5 to get a day's work done can hardly be impartial about it.
And I don't expect beta-testers to break any confidentiality agreements just to tell us that it still needs work. Besides, no-one in their right mind will purchase and rely on this product at .0, the track record from Quark is all there to see.
The large concerns I was referring to were newspapers like The Guardian, the Telegraph, other major clients like The BBC as well as Conde Nast. You don't transition a setup like that on a whim and put money into retraining just to jump ship again...
Not only did Quark let their flagship product get away from them, they also managed to alienate virtually their entire customer base by providing one of the shoddiest and arrogant customer support schemes, as well as charging a ludicrous price for it while ignoring the needs of educational establishments with substantial discount volume licensing -- these are where the next generation of designers are coming from.
The whole approach to their market was so amateurish, so short-sighted and so completely ripe for plucking by Adobe.
So a new sheriff comes to town, and now we see a rebranding, a promise to overhaul its customer support, a new aggressive approach to advertising and marketing and a new product -- which will still be like the old product yet with a few new bells and whistles.
Speaking for myself, I cannot think of a demo more keenly anticipated than this one and one which will be rigourously put through its paces before I go ahead and purchase 6 upgrade licenses.