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  3. Adobe abandons desktop apps

Adobe abandons desktop apps

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  • G gavindon

    looks like CS5 will be the new Win XP

    Treat stressful situations like a dog, if you can't eat it, play with it or screw it, then just piss on it and walk away. Be careful which toes you step on today, they might be connected to the foot that kicks your butt tomorrow.

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Marco Bertschi
    wrote on last edited by
    #6

    Abandoned but still in use :^)

    cheers Marco Bertschi


    Twitter | Articles


    You have absolutely no idea how glad I am that I have no idea at all. - OriginalGriff I'm at peace with the world and myself. - Me

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    • G Gregory Gadow

      Adobe shifts Creative software to the cloud, monthly subscription[^] Basically, Adobe has said that they are abandoning desktop applications (they have already pulled Creative Suite 6 from physical and virtual store shelves) and replacing them with subscription-based cloud services. So far, this seems to apply only to the Creative Suite applications (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, After Effects, Adobe Premier Pro and Adobe Muse) so, hopefully, more basic apps like Acrobat and Acrobat Reader will not be affected. This really pisses me off. The company I work for is in the financial sector. We get audited by state and federal agencies regularly. A big part of the audits look at data security. It takes several years for regulators to address changes in technology, and until we have clear protections, there is no bloody way in (the hot place) we are going to use any kind of cloud-based service: we simply cannot accept the risk of someone hacking the facility, stealing client information and emptying accounts. If Amazon and the major credit cards can be hacked, who is to say that Adobe (and Microsoft and Apple and other companies moving all their services to the cloud) won't be as well?

      M Offline
      M Offline
      Mladen Jankovic
      wrote on last edited by
      #7

      Relevant Dilbert[^]

      more from me | GALex: C++ Library for Advanced Genetic Algorithms

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      • G gavindon

        looks like CS5 will be the new Win XP

        Treat stressful situations like a dog, if you can't eat it, play with it or screw it, then just piss on it and walk away. Be careful which toes you step on today, they might be connected to the foot that kicks your butt tomorrow.

        T Offline
        T Offline
        tgrt
        wrote on last edited by
        #8

        CS6 really. And they've said you'll still be able to buy CS6. It just won't be updated. They're getting rightfully beat up pretty bad by this decision on their Facebook page and elsewhere. I've been a long time Photoshop user and customer. It's expensive, but worth it. However, I won't pay for subscription software. So it looks like I'll be on CS6 until there is a competitive option.

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        • G Gregory Gadow

          Adobe shifts Creative software to the cloud, monthly subscription[^] Basically, Adobe has said that they are abandoning desktop applications (they have already pulled Creative Suite 6 from physical and virtual store shelves) and replacing them with subscription-based cloud services. So far, this seems to apply only to the Creative Suite applications (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, After Effects, Adobe Premier Pro and Adobe Muse) so, hopefully, more basic apps like Acrobat and Acrobat Reader will not be affected. This really pisses me off. The company I work for is in the financial sector. We get audited by state and federal agencies regularly. A big part of the audits look at data security. It takes several years for regulators to address changes in technology, and until we have clear protections, there is no bloody way in (the hot place) we are going to use any kind of cloud-based service: we simply cannot accept the risk of someone hacking the facility, stealing client information and emptying accounts. If Amazon and the major credit cards can be hacked, who is to say that Adobe (and Microsoft and Apple and other companies moving all their services to the cloud) won't be as well?

          W Offline
          W Offline
          wizardzz
          wrote on last edited by
          #9

          Gregory.Gadow wrote:

          The company I work for is in the financial sector.

          What do you use Adobe for aside from pdf?

          Twits[^]

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          • G Gregory Gadow

            Adobe shifts Creative software to the cloud, monthly subscription[^] Basically, Adobe has said that they are abandoning desktop applications (they have already pulled Creative Suite 6 from physical and virtual store shelves) and replacing them with subscription-based cloud services. So far, this seems to apply only to the Creative Suite applications (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, After Effects, Adobe Premier Pro and Adobe Muse) so, hopefully, more basic apps like Acrobat and Acrobat Reader will not be affected. This really pisses me off. The company I work for is in the financial sector. We get audited by state and federal agencies regularly. A big part of the audits look at data security. It takes several years for regulators to address changes in technology, and until we have clear protections, there is no bloody way in (the hot place) we are going to use any kind of cloud-based service: we simply cannot accept the risk of someone hacking the facility, stealing client information and emptying accounts. If Amazon and the major credit cards can be hacked, who is to say that Adobe (and Microsoft and Apple and other companies moving all their services to the cloud) won't be as well?

            Mike HankeyM Offline
            Mike HankeyM Offline
            Mike Hankey
            wrote on last edited by
            #10

            I'll use uSoft Paint before paying a monthly subscription, they can kiss my entire...well you know.

            VS2010/Atmel Studio 6.1 ToDo Manager Extension Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.

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            • G Gregory Gadow

              Adobe shifts Creative software to the cloud, monthly subscription[^] Basically, Adobe has said that they are abandoning desktop applications (they have already pulled Creative Suite 6 from physical and virtual store shelves) and replacing them with subscription-based cloud services. So far, this seems to apply only to the Creative Suite applications (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, After Effects, Adobe Premier Pro and Adobe Muse) so, hopefully, more basic apps like Acrobat and Acrobat Reader will not be affected. This really pisses me off. The company I work for is in the financial sector. We get audited by state and federal agencies regularly. A big part of the audits look at data security. It takes several years for regulators to address changes in technology, and until we have clear protections, there is no bloody way in (the hot place) we are going to use any kind of cloud-based service: we simply cannot accept the risk of someone hacking the facility, stealing client information and emptying accounts. If Amazon and the major credit cards can be hacked, who is to say that Adobe (and Microsoft and Apple and other companies moving all their services to the cloud) won't be as well?

              L Offline
              L Offline
              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #11

              Hopefully this is one more step towards the company disappearing altogether.

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              • G Gregory Gadow

                Adobe shifts Creative software to the cloud, monthly subscription[^] Basically, Adobe has said that they are abandoning desktop applications (they have already pulled Creative Suite 6 from physical and virtual store shelves) and replacing them with subscription-based cloud services. So far, this seems to apply only to the Creative Suite applications (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, After Effects, Adobe Premier Pro and Adobe Muse) so, hopefully, more basic apps like Acrobat and Acrobat Reader will not be affected. This really pisses me off. The company I work for is in the financial sector. We get audited by state and federal agencies regularly. A big part of the audits look at data security. It takes several years for regulators to address changes in technology, and until we have clear protections, there is no bloody way in (the hot place) we are going to use any kind of cloud-based service: we simply cannot accept the risk of someone hacking the facility, stealing client information and emptying accounts. If Amazon and the major credit cards can be hacked, who is to say that Adobe (and Microsoft and Apple and other companies moving all their services to the cloud) won't be as well?

                P Offline
                P Offline
                PSU Steve
                wrote on last edited by
                #12

                Concepts like this completely ignore Government entities who operate classified networks that aren't physically connected to the Internet. There is no way to "phone home" and thus no way to use software that works like this.

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                • L LloydA111

                  No, the programs still get downloaded and installed, you just pay for it.

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                  G Offline
                  G Offline
                  GStrad
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #13

                  But the software will phone home regularly and check you're still paying. I want to buy my software not rent it - then I can calculate return on investment based on assumption that I won't upgrade for another x years - if the software is viable for longer I increase my return before the next upgrade. To me this is a parallel to the games companies moving to online games - it's about DRM and killing piracy / the second hand market. Personally I hate this stuff - what happens when I'm traveling and the software can't phone home for x number of days, will it just stop working?

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                  • G Gregory Gadow

                    Adobe shifts Creative software to the cloud, monthly subscription[^] Basically, Adobe has said that they are abandoning desktop applications (they have already pulled Creative Suite 6 from physical and virtual store shelves) and replacing them with subscription-based cloud services. So far, this seems to apply only to the Creative Suite applications (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, After Effects, Adobe Premier Pro and Adobe Muse) so, hopefully, more basic apps like Acrobat and Acrobat Reader will not be affected. This really pisses me off. The company I work for is in the financial sector. We get audited by state and federal agencies regularly. A big part of the audits look at data security. It takes several years for regulators to address changes in technology, and until we have clear protections, there is no bloody way in (the hot place) we are going to use any kind of cloud-based service: we simply cannot accept the risk of someone hacking the facility, stealing client information and emptying accounts. If Amazon and the major credit cards can be hacked, who is to say that Adobe (and Microsoft and Apple and other companies moving all their services to the cloud) won't be as well?

                    R Offline
                    R Offline
                    RafagaX
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #14

                    I'm starting to hear: "This is the time of X open source project to take over the X Adobe product"... ;P

                    CEO at: - Rafaga Systems - Para Facturas - Modern Components for the moment...

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                    0
                    • G Gregory Gadow

                      Adobe shifts Creative software to the cloud, monthly subscription[^] Basically, Adobe has said that they are abandoning desktop applications (they have already pulled Creative Suite 6 from physical and virtual store shelves) and replacing them with subscription-based cloud services. So far, this seems to apply only to the Creative Suite applications (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, After Effects, Adobe Premier Pro and Adobe Muse) so, hopefully, more basic apps like Acrobat and Acrobat Reader will not be affected. This really pisses me off. The company I work for is in the financial sector. We get audited by state and federal agencies regularly. A big part of the audits look at data security. It takes several years for regulators to address changes in technology, and until we have clear protections, there is no bloody way in (the hot place) we are going to use any kind of cloud-based service: we simply cannot accept the risk of someone hacking the facility, stealing client information and emptying accounts. If Amazon and the major credit cards can be hacked, who is to say that Adobe (and Microsoft and Apple and other companies moving all their services to the cloud) won't be as well?

                      C Offline
                      C Offline
                      Chad3F
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #15

                      I guess that means they will lose business with any companies or government agencies that would normally run their [desktop] products on secure intranets that can't do internet cloud stuff. I really think that cloud-everything will eventually be the next dot-com-bomb.. far too much hype and not enough reality check.

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