Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 11th Aug 2010 14:27 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 436252
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In my opinion, Adobe is too loyal. If I was an exec at Adobe I would have killed all of their products on the Mac platform the day Apple banned Adobe's cross-compiler for Flash on the iPhone. Abusing your competitors is the standard in today's world, but Adobe is one of Apple's largest third-party developers and Apple should view them as a partner rather than a competitor.
In my opinion, Adobe is too loyal. If I was an exec at Adobe I would have killed all of their products on the Mac platform the day Apple banned Adobe's cross-compiler for Flash on the iPhone. Abusing your competitors is the standard in today's world, but Adobe is one of Apple's largest third-party developers and Apple should view them as a partner rather than a competitor.
Yes, you know, all Adobe's foot dragging over the last 10 years has really helped Apple, right? Adobe's customers using Apple equipment have deserved better.
Adobe wanted cheap development so they did the minimum to get everything running on Mac OS X, except for what wasn't selling well. This hasn't helped their customers one bit. e.g., Photoshop 6 in the Classic environment ran better than the "native" Photoshop 7.
I'm using Photoshop CS3 finally but it's not a good native application, showing CPU usage as though it's polling. Should the loop code from the 1990s still be there?





Member since:
2008-12-26
A truly loyal dog - no matter how much you kick it, it keeps coming back at lunchtime.