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View Full Version : CNET: "Adobe, Apple Drifting Apart"


Kent Pribbernow
03-31-2004, 03:00 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://news.com.com/2100-1012_3-5181434.html?tag=nefd_lede' target='_blank'>http://news.com.com/2100-1012_3-5181434.html?tag=nefd_lede</a><br /><br /></div><img src="http://www.digitalmediathoughts.com/images/adobe_apple.gif" />CNET is running a story discussing the relationship between Adobe and Apple, and how that partnership may be waning.<br /><br />"Right now, it's in a colder period. Signs of frost have been accumulating for the past couple of years, with Adobe dropping Macintosh support for several software products and introducing others as Microsoft Windows-only applications. At the same time, Apple has quietly pushed Adobe out of a few markets by selling its own applications or bundling them into its OS X operating system.<br /><br />Windows has finally become adequate as a publishing platform," he said, meaning graphics professionals can switch to a cheaper platform than the Mac."<br /><br />We recently touched on this topic with Adobe's discontinuation of FrameMaker for Mac. Adobe seems to be focusing its resources on Windows.<br /><br />I work as a web designer, and I can tell you from my experience that Apple's share of the creative professional field is definitely declining. Seven years ago every digital artist I encountered was on a Mac. Whether it was a graphics designer, web designer, illustrator, Flash animator, etc., they all used Macs. Today the landscape looks very different. I would say more than 90% of web designers and firms that I encounter are on Windows. Macs still have a very sizable lead in the graphics field, but PCs are gaining in popularity. The problem isn't platform migration as much as it is a matter of "new" content creators choosing PC. So perhaps this is, in part, why Adobe is shifting focus?

Zack Mahdavi
03-31-2004, 04:57 PM
To tell you the truth, I think these days, for photo editing type work, Macs and PCs are in the same league. PCs are just as fast as Macs, plus Windows XP is very stable. I'm not surprised that Adobe and Apple are drifting apart, and I actually believe that Apple and Macromedia will soon be drifting apart as well.

Ed Hansberry
03-31-2004, 10:16 PM
PC based revenue for Adobe surpassed their Apple revenue long ago - mid 90's IIRC. It is an increasingly smaller part of their revenue and to the point it isn't worth their effort.

Kent Pribbernow
03-31-2004, 10:36 PM
PC based revenue for Adobe surpassed their Apple revenue long ago - mid 90's IIRC. It is an increasingly smaller part of their revenue and to the point it isn't worth their effort.

Yep. Right now It's around 75% PC, 25% Mac.