
Earlier today, Apple released Boot Camp, a utility that allows the painless install of Windows XP on the new Intel Macs. TUAW has been covering this announcement quite a bit today, but one of the interesting questions that has been posed is: what's going to happen to third party software? Or, the more specific question pertaining to TUPW here is: does Adobe still have motivation to release CS3 for Mac OS X?
While we wait for an official statement from Adobe or a post on the less formal Adobe Blogs (how about it Mr. Nack?), I think C.K. has pretty much hit the nail on the head at TUAW: While Boot Camp might be great for those who want or have a need to run both Mac OS X and Windows XP on their Mac, those who are going to are most certainly not in the majority of the Mac-using base. In other words: there's still a huge Mac OS X market out there (which doubled in the U.S. last year), and in all likelihood, 3rd party apps that ride the fence like Creative Suite and Office aren't going anywhere.







1. Why would I run Windows just to run Photoshop CS3? Why would I run Windows at all? Do people really think that Mac users are Mac users because of the hardware, and now that you can run XP on Mac hardware, we'll all just use XP? Please! That's a joke. People use Macs because they're Macs, the vast majority of which is the OS, not the hardware. Adobe has no less motivation to release CS3 for the Mac than they did before Boot Camp. Maybe they have more.
I'm itching to use XP like I'm itching for a root canal. All the noise about this is a bit much, IMO.
Posted at 6:46PM on Apr 5th 2006 by Jeremey