It may simply turn out to be a financial filter to better determine where to continue putting development resources.
I think my broader idea is more narrow: I liked the Jobs-era attitude of "we need our own" as a statement of pride if nothing more. Apple under Jobs sought to create the Platonic ideal of video (photo, DVD, motion graphics) editing software, to show the world how it could be done. That's some chutzpah in a world of bottom-lines. And it let Apple take some bold, risky swings even when the results weren't broadly popular.Which I think speaks to your broader idea, Bonusround: What's Apple's goal here?
Me, I'll take genuine product and design risks like FCP X or Aperture over nonsense paint jobs like Liquid Glass any and every day.
I could be totally mistaken but isn't FCP X a popular app with the YouTube/Insta/TikTok crowd?
I totally agree. It would be great if Apple treated these pieces of software like flagships of the brand meant to sell Macs. But that just doesn’t seem to be the case any more. On the video production side, there’s lots of great software on the Mac. Ditto on music production. And of course MS Office is available everywhere.In a previous iteration of Apple the justification for efforts like Final Cut, Motion, and Aperture was simple: to sell hardware, specifically high-end Macs. A pro Mac might be exotic and cost more than some PCs, but look: it offers this amazing software you can't get anywhere else.
When Apple made the “big switch” on FCP they abandoned the motion picture/feature editors in favor of a workflow optimized for spot news and shorter form programming. (Less prestigious but more prevalent.) Davinci has eaten a lot of share, but FCP still has its fans.
I think this every time I have the misfortune of using Lightroom, which still feels impossibly clunky this many years after Aperture died.I just want Aperture 4.0, please. Wake me up when that happens.
More generally, FCP X still seems to have a significant user base among solo operators or small teams, especially in-house content teams. Resolve is steadily gaining momentum in that field. "Free yet highly capable" is a great place for starting out, so that's taking the newcomers. The steadily growing feature set paired with solid performance is luring over established FCP X users. I do video as a side gig and use FCP X. If it was my main job, I'd probably switch to Resolve, but FCP X is good enough, very fast and already paid for.I could be totally mistaken but isn't FCP X a popular app with the YouTube/Insta/TikTok crowd? Obviously not as serious as making an academy award winning film, but an important niche nonetheless.
It's not ideal as it's two separate apps and costs, but try out Photo Mechanic plus Adobe Camera Raw. Much better than Lightroom, IMHO.I think this every time I have the misfortune of using Lightroom, which still feels impossibly clunky this many years after Aperture died.
Lightroom Classic is a relic of mid 2000s design but, if you haven’t already, give Lightroom Desktop a spin. The interface seems to have far more in common with Aperture than the legacy LR—smooth, fluid, and uncluttered, with nary a module in sight. It feels like Aperture’s spiritual successorI think this every time I have the misfortune of using Lightroom, which still feels impossibly clunky this many years after Aperture died.
If you're eligible for Apple's education discount you can get the "Pro Apps Bundle for Education" (FCP/Logic/Motion/Compressor/Main Stage) directly from Apple for $199.99. That's where I got my license after news about FCP for iPad going rent-only surfaced.... I'm tempted to buy FCP and Pixelmator Pro now, not because I necessarily need them, but because it might be the last chance to get them outright. ...
I'll give Apple the benefit of the doubt to "keep it classy" with the subtle nudges to move up to the subscription but generally stay out of people's way if they stay on the free tier. If nothing else they should know that free word processors are a dime a dozen (been using Google Docs for ages myself) so if they make the upsell too annoying users will walk. Pages is great and all but your average user just needs something to bang out a quick letter or report. You can do that in TextEdit for Pete's sake.So far, I've only had one "are you sure you don't want to pay 12.99 a month?" nag screen for each, on first launch, and hopefully that will be it. Because if it reappears, I'm done with all three apps permanently.
I'll give Apple the benefit of the doubt to "keep it classy" with the subtle nudges to move up to the subscription but generally stay out of people's way if they stay on the free tier. If nothing else they should know that free word processors are a dime a dozen (been using Google Docs for ages myself) so if they make the upsell too annoying users will walk. Pages is great and all but your average user just needs something to bang out a quick letter or report. You can do that in TextEdit for Pete's sake.
That's because the macOS and iOS Pages, Numbers, and Keynote were different items with different ids in the App Store. They added a macOS entry to the iOS App Store items, and that's what will be updated in the future.
An unfortunate consequence of the initial macOS/iOS split.
Totally, but I have a low tolerance for being marketed to by Apple within its apps and operating systems given the cost of entry to the ecosystem. But that's my sand to pound.
Still clumsy, though. First, you have to update the old iWork apps to v14.5, just so that they can display a dialog on launch telling you to go to the App Store to download the new v15 apps. Once you manually download the new apps, then you have both versions installed side by side differentiated only by their icons*, and also have to manually delete the old ones. And finally when you launch the new ones, things like your preferences and Open Recents menu entries don’t carry over because they’re separate apps.That's because the macOS and iOS Pages, Numbers, and Keynote were different items with different ids in the App Store. They added a macOS entry to the iOS App Store items, and that's what will be updated in the future.
An unfortunate consequence of the initial macOS/iOS split.
Most new "liquid glass" icons are worse than their predecessors. Case in point: Automator.I’ll say this: the new Pages, Numbers and Keynote icons are hideous.
Probably, differences in licensing terms between apps.Why they "split" this app from the original, rather than just having it as an update, I've no idea.
On the one hand: this is how things have worked by default on i(Pad)OS since the beginning of time.They also discovered that deleting FCP from your iPad (which is one of Apple's troubleshooting recommendations) will also delete any projects and video clips, unless you've manually selected the option to save them to external storage, which is not the default setup when you begin a new project. Yikkes.
On the one hand: this is how things have worked by default on i(Pad)OS since the beginning of time.
Someone on a podcast said it’s because the Mac and iOS versions used to have separate app IDs, so the new apps are Mac versions of the iOS apps.Why they "split" this app from the original, rather than just having it as an update, I've no idea.