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The Interactive Manual and Photo Library of Woody Landscape Plants


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Starring: Michael Dirr
Type: DVD
Studio: Varsity Press- Publisher

Description Not Available


total reviews 5


Customer Reviews
star rating 1
Does NOT work with windows vista
It is a clanky piece of software at best... and to make matters worse it does not even work with windows Vista!!!!!!!
star rating 4
Excellent resource with caveats
Dirr's book "Manual of Woody Landscape Plants" is the standard text in the field. The DVD contains the text of the book, the line drawings from the book plus thousands of color photographs of plants. It contains a searchable database allowing you to search for plants based on things like flower color, flowering time, fall color, size and cultural requirements. All that makes this DVD and excellent resource for the student or plantsman.

Now for the caveats. It is Windows only (and doesn't run on Vista). The format isn't great and the database cannot be changed or added to. You cannot add your own photographs or thoughts about the plants. It is best to think of this as an interactive text book rather than a database you control.

Like a previous post I found the inability to maximize the base window annoying, it contributes to the feel of poor formatting.
star rating 1
This DVD is VERY DISAPPOINTING and NOT USER-FRIENDLY!!!
I'm a Horticulture student at the University of Georgia, and while Dr. Dirr's reference books are great this computer version is terrible. Why?

- It is proprietary to Windows. They could have used Flash or HTML to accomplish exactly the same thing, and it would have run on Mac and Linux as well.

- The user interface is horrible. You can't "maximize" the window, and are stuck searching for and *reading* information in a TINY box on the screen.

- The information is presented in an ugly format. Text is not anti-aliased (smooth looking), and much of the information is smashed together, making it hard to read and discern details. They could have used better spacing, a better typeface, bold and italics emphasis, etc to make this easier to read and quickly locate relevant information on the screen.

- Photos are VERY LOW RESOLUTION. If you want to zoom in on them, forget it. They get extremely pixelated. Also, some of the photos are just poor quality and look like they were never balanced in Photoshop. The line drawings are also not vectorized, which means when you zoom in on them or try to print them they sometimes have jagged edges.

- Altogether this program is NOT professional at all. It looks and feels like it was made in 1995. Very poorly put together, hard to use, and not worth $100!

I would like to state that this review in no way considers the INFORMATION that is included in this DVD. The information is very valuable and a reflection of Dr. Dirr's expertise. If you like the book (which you should), and want a searchable electronic copy, this DVD is unfortunately your only option. The information is on the DVD, but the interface to access it will probably leave you frustrated and wondering why it is not as professional as it could be -- especially when you just forked over a small fortune.

My recommendation? Buy the book and a pack of post-it note bookmarks. Pictures of the trees and leaves can be easily found on the web for free. There is no need for this program, considering the cost and poor interface.
star rating 1
Totally Unuseable
What a major disappointment! A lifelong educator has chosen to lock his knowledge up in software that limits the user to only current Windows based operating systems. Both he and Alan Armitage have spent a lifetime photographing, evaluating, and describing thousands of plants. There are absolutely no other resources like this. I can certainly understand why they might want to protect their images & information but these are not merely locked up, they are tied to an operating system. Will these CD & DVD software applications still work twenty or even ten years from now? I certainly would count on all of the current Windows functioning when Vista finally appears.

And as an educator myself I had hoped to use or recommend this to my college students and perhaps use them in class but our campus has a significant percentage of Apple & Linux systems which cannot run this software.

I know there are excellent alternatives available but the publisher made this fatal right from the start.

Caveat emptor
star rating 5
thorough reference with tons of photos
In planning my garden I have scoured the web for photos of different shrubs and trees for their habit, in flower, in fall, etc. As I am not a professional, buying the Horticopia photo library is hard for me to rationalize. Buying this DVD was not-
Dirr gives lots of practical information on placement, habit, propagation, landscape value, and disease problems associated with numerous varieties and cultivars of each plant, and the DVD is sitting in my computer's drive all the time. The range of photos (both close-ups and habit shots, buds, stem, bark, leaves, flowers, diseases, fall color, winter habit, etc.) is very useful and the specific information on culture, growth rates, berries and seeds (and where they are attractive vs. where they can linger and become ugly) which zones the plant is marginal in or zones where fall color is best, etc. is very helpful. For the curious, he lists many additional research articles on the finer points of some cultivars. While for choosing the right magnolia, for example, I am still desiring a separate book on the many cultivars, and I have had the darndest time trying to locate anywhere a picture of Hamamelis Jelena in its summer leafed-out habit-- this is still what I turn to far and above any other book or source in my possession for plants information. While this won't substitute for going to arboretums and nurseries to window-shop in person (and it would be a little sad if it could...), it is the handiest reference I've come across. Searchable database feature lets you look for plants by characteristics (light, color, etc.) or by scientific or common name. For the price, I would buy this instead of Dirr's encyclopedia (or in addition to it). I am happy to have both but now refer to the DVD more often.

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