![]() ![]() Instead, the xMatters technical publications team realized they needed to move to modern software capable of publishing to multiple channels from a single content source. “For awhile, we were maintaining two sets of PDF manuals with FrameMaker ®, but it just wasn’t meeting our needs.” “We used Adobe ® FrameMaker ® for about five years, but we could see that the future of documentation was going to be online, and PDF documentation wasn’t going to be so prevalent,“ recalls Cameron Stewart, xMatters technical publications product manager. This created the need to publish both web and PDF documentation. However, as more xMatters customers migrated to the company’s cloud-based solutions, they wanted to access information online. The latter were first created in Microsoft ® Word, and then later using Adobe ® FrameMaker ®, which was better suited for long documentation formats. For years, customers primarily purchased xMatters software to use on-premises, and the company initially produced printed manuals and downloadable PDF files. XMatters’ approach to documentation has evolved over time with the business. You can read day 357 here, where we featured a Modern Humans deck that forgoes all but white in order to stay lean and mean.Evolving Business Drives New Content Delivery Demands This is day 358 of ’s 2017 Deck of the Day column, where each day we’ll feature a different Standard, Modern, or Legacy deck that caught our eye. ![]() Here are the changes I would make going forward: This combo can singlehandedly beat a lot of the format once resolved, and it offers this deck a new dynamic angle of attack that it didn’t previously have. Some Moon decks have been turning to powerful combos to win the game quickly, and this version is doing exactly that by using the combo of Madcap Experiment and Platinum Emperion. The 3 mana enchantment has proven itself as a powerful Modern staple as of late, and just like most Moon decks, this one functions significantly better when it is in play, potentially locking opponents out of the game without much effort. Lastly, Bonfire of the Damned plays a critical role in this deck, wiping the opponent’s board once this deck has its mana in place.īlood Moon is perhaps the centerpiece of this deck. Chandra, Torch of Defiance is an excellent way for this deck to draw cards and gain extra mana while killing opposition creatures. Inferno Titan and Stormbreath Dragon end the game very quickly, while Thragtusk can help this deck get back into the game and Thrun, the Last Troll is a nearly impossible to answer threat. Once this deck has asserted its mana dominance over the opponent, there are several ways for it to take advantage of it. Stone Rain is the easiest (and least color intensive) land destruction spell available, while Mwonvuli Acid-Moss is a little more expensive but has both land destruction and ramp attached to it, singlehandedly swinging the game in this deck’s favor. The latter of which is better in this deck than most thanks to Utopia Sprawl being a very important card to this deck’s strategy. Birds of Paradise and Arbor Elf are the 1 mana creatures that ramp mana. For ramp, this deck only plays 1 mana “ramp” spells, as it fits better into this deck’s curve. Primarily, this deck is looking to gain a significant mana advantage over its opponent, both through ramp and land destruction. The deck we’re featuring today takes the traditional Ponza decklist and adds a very powerful combo to it. Its ability to stifle opponents in a very new way makes it an appealing option for many. R/G Ponza has been a deck on the rise in Modern over the last several months, especially on MtGO. ![]()
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