serpicolugnut
OS X Supreme Being
For those who think that pirating an application isn't stealing and doesn't hurt the platform, look no further than the recent killing of Premiere for the Mac by Adobe. Sure, FCP is a better product - but it only got that way by having a healthy competitor in Adobe Premiere.
Now, Mac users are left with just Final Cut Pro. Do you really believe Apple will feel just as compelled to be innovative with a user base that has no other options? I would like to think so, but I'm not quite that naive.
And for those who keep saying "Who cares? So long as Adobe keeps making Photoshop for the Mac, I'm good", listen to this statement from the Premiere team leader...
It is estimated that Mac Premiere sales were between 10-20% of the total sales of the product. The last numbers I had seen for Adobes total sales breakdown by platform were 73% Wintel, 27% Mac. Let's say that figure drops to 19% Mac. Still think it's a stretch for Adobe to kill off some of it's other key Mac applications (Illustrator, Photoshop, InDesign, After Effects, etc.)
Consider this next time you fire up that pirated copy of Illustrator and Photoshop, and how the next releases of these applications might be the last for the Mac if sales figures don't improve.
I'm not trying to be a chicken little and claim the sky is falling, but there is cause for concern.
BTW - I predict that Adobe will next announce that Live Motion 3 will be PC only.
Now, Mac users are left with just Final Cut Pro. Do you really believe Apple will feel just as compelled to be innovative with a user base that has no other options? I would like to think so, but I'm not quite that naive.
And for those who keep saying "Who cares? So long as Adobe keeps making Photoshop for the Mac, I'm good", listen to this statement from the Premiere team leader...
David Trescot, senior director of Adobe's digital video products group, said the new edition of Premiere is a complete rewrite of the application and it didn't make financial sense to support the Mac anymore.
"We were rewriting Premiere from scratch, and it would have taken a lot of work to have cross-platform support," Trescot said.
It is estimated that Mac Premiere sales were between 10-20% of the total sales of the product. The last numbers I had seen for Adobes total sales breakdown by platform were 73% Wintel, 27% Mac. Let's say that figure drops to 19% Mac. Still think it's a stretch for Adobe to kill off some of it's other key Mac applications (Illustrator, Photoshop, InDesign, After Effects, etc.)
Consider this next time you fire up that pirated copy of Illustrator and Photoshop, and how the next releases of these applications might be the last for the Mac if sales figures don't improve.
I'm not trying to be a chicken little and claim the sky is falling, but there is cause for concern.
BTW - I predict that Adobe will next announce that Live Motion 3 will be PC only.