John Nack has
answered the burning question of
OS X Adobe app users everywhere on his blog yesterday: when will we see native Intel OS X versions for all the shiny
new Macs Apple is rolling out this year? Unfortunately,
the response is less than ideal. In fact, I think
it belies something fishy is up either with Adobe, Apple or both.
John Nack's answer is basically that they
have no plans to update the current CS2 or Studio 8 suites to run natively on Intel OS X, which means anyone buying a
new Intel Mac this year will have to deal with running these apps in the Rosetta emulation layer. While it seems like
this might be at least workable for some users, it is by no means ideal. The only way to get an Intel version of either
suite, as of Adobe's current plans, is to purchase a new/upgrade suite sometime in 2007. Let's also not forget the
just-released After Effects 7.0 - who knows when
an Intel OS X copy of that will appear, but according to Adobe's FAQ (
pdf link) on the matter, it sounds like purchasers of
even that brand new app won't get an Intel version without buying an upgrade/new version.
Now I am not a
software engineer, nor do I have a clue as to what goes on inside the walls at Adobe. Still, this less than ideal
situation smells rotten to me, and I don't mean just Adobe. Ever since Apple's Intel announcement last summer, they've
told the industry (at least the consumer side) that Intel Macs would appear by summer 2006. Yet they released two, one
being a pro machine, last month, and they won't have even their own pro apps ready until sometime in March. I don't
know about you, but the phrase "rushed to market" comes to mind.
Adding to the pile, I'm starting
to believe that John Gruber (of
Daring Fireball fame) might have something
with
a post last April,
worrying about Adobe's move away from being a great software company to just a company with a product to sell and
revenues to bolster. The fact that there won't be any updates or even a retail upgrade for previous versions of CS or
Studio to run on Intel Macs is quite a slap in the face to consumers. Apple, by contrast, is at least allowing Final
Cut Studio owners to trade their PowerPC discs in for Intel copies at the mere cost of $50. While some are complaining
about even that $50 charge, it's still a lot better than the price of a full upgrade or an entirely new copy.
My gripes aside however, what do you TUPW readers think? Is 2007 far too long to wait? Is Adobe milking their
customers for every dime they can? Or is this just another growing pain due to a processor switch by Apple? Let's hear
your thoughts.