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Apple Creator Studio

515 points25 daysapple.com
jasongill25 days ago

It's $12.99/mo or $129/yr for a subscription that includes Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Motion, Compressor, MainStage, Keynote, Pages, and Numbers

Educational discount with verification required drops the price to $2.99/mo / $29.99/yr.

The regular-price subscription includes family sharing, education price does not.

One-time purchase versions remain available: Final Cut Pro ($299.99), Logic Pro ($199.99), Pixelmator Pro ($49.99), Motion ($49.99), Compressor ($49.99), and MainStage ($29.99).

Comes out January 28th

jasoneckert25 days ago

The most important benefits in my opinion are choice and price - people like me who prefer to buy software outright can still do so at a reasonable cost, while others who opt for a subscription can also do so (again, at a reasonable cost).

embedding-shape25 days ago

It's pretty clever that they keep the "pay one time" option still alive while announcing the availability of subscription, so anyone who says "Boo, not you too Apple" can easily be shut down with "You still have the option to buy it!" instead of leaving those critics without answers. Of course, they'll eventually remove the option to buy the software by paying once, I think everyone can see the writing on the wall, but still clever of them to choose to do it later for PR purposes. 1-0 to Apple :)

alwa25 days ago

Final Cut Pro X has been available for purchase (at the same price, IIRC) for well over a decade now. Pro feathers were ruffled at the time they leapt from FCP7 to FCPX: the $299 price point was something like 1/4 of the going rate for its predecessors, was Apple planning to abandon its pros for the consumer market? Well. Here we are almost 15 years later, and if you paid the one-time price back then, you're still getting free updates today (at least on desktop). And you can still buy in with 299 2025 dollars, rather than 299 2011 dollars.

At the time, the common wisdom was that they'd go the same route as Adobe: you'd have to buy Final Cut X+1 in a couple years for another $299, and Final Cut X+2 a couple years after that... to their credit, that's not the way it's gone.

So that way, I imagine, all the film folks have a little more money to chuck at their high-powered Mac hardware budgets in the next refresh cycle instead... An evergreen Final Cut Pro license costs almost as much as 1TB of SSD from those guys!

+1
weinzierl25 days ago
+2
derefr25 days ago
raw_anon_111125 days ago

Office 365 - the subscription version of Office - was released in 2011.

Microsoft still offers a one time purchase of Office. There is precedent for Bigcorp keeping a one time purchase version and offer a prescription.

+1
nialse25 days ago
+2
addandsubtract25 days ago
+2
Plasmoid2000ad25 days ago
+1
PinguTS25 days ago
+1
benterix25 days ago
alwillis25 days ago

> Of course, they'll eventually remove the option to buy the software by paying once, I think everyone can see the writing on the wall

There's no indication Apple is planning to end the option of paying once for these apps.

Apple introduced subscriptions for Final Cut and Logic nearly three years ago [1]; this isn't new by any means. Pages, Numbers and Keynote remain available at no cost.

[1]: https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2023/05/apple-brings-final-cu...

Razengan25 days ago

[flagged]

smugma25 days ago

Many years ago Apple reduced their pricing on many of these apps. They also made their OS updates free.

Apple wants its customers to buy/subscribe to these tools so that you’re in the Apple ecosystem and buy more hardware and services.

Unlike Adobe, they have profit-maximizing incentives to let you stay on the buy/rent model that you prefer.

whycome25 days ago

Why do you think they will remove the option to buy the software? They’ve kept the model for years. They’re targeting different audiences with the move.

groundzeros201525 days ago

You are complaining about a problem that hasn’t happened yet and there is no inherent reason it will happen.

dabinat25 days ago

There are features they are planning to make exclusive to the subscriptions. I don’t know if they’re planning to make the one-time purchase go away completely, but it seems like it’s going to be approached as the “lesser” option.

https://www.macrumors.com/2026/01/13/apple-creator-studio-ex...

philipallstar25 days ago

> so anyone who says "Boo, not you too Apple" can easily be shut down with "You still have the option to buy it!" instead of leaving those critics without answers

This is like saying that it's clever for Mars to keep Mars Bars while launching a new bar, as it "shuts down" complaints that Mars Bars will no longer exist.

+1
hnlmorg25 days ago
hexasquid25 days ago

They're running a conspiracy to trick people into not shutting them down by offering two ways to pay, the devious foxes.

drdaeman25 days ago

Not Apple, but iMazing switched to subscription model and they simply lost me as a customer.

JetBrains tried something similar a while ago too, and almost screwed it up - but managed to listen to their customers and nailed it with the perpetual fallback licensing. Making me not just pay the subscription but feel respect to the company.

YMMV, of course.

handsclean25 days ago

The other thing that’s going to go away is purchasing only what you need. I want exactly one of these apps, I bet virtually nobody uses all of them, and yet the suckers are going to be telling us that being made to buy stuff we don’t want or use is “more value”.

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smith701825 days ago
wilg25 days ago

I think it's okay, or even better probably, if they move to subscription only. All Apple's paid apps have languished for years and if its actually a revenue stream for them maybe they'll actually make them industry-leading again.

dopamean24 days ago

This is such a strange way to think about what was done. Rather than just being happy they kept the pay once option and saying that's good you're imagining critics who how Apple can "shut them down."

SunshineTheCat25 days ago

Yea I've already purchased some of these apps so I was not going to thrilled if they pulled an Adobe and made me pay for an overpriced subscription on top of it >:(

kergonath25 days ago

Exactly what I was thinking. I bought Pixelmator Pro 3 days ago… But I am happy, as I have absolutely no need for the others, except for the free ones.

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james-bcn25 days ago
carlosjobim25 days ago

> It's pretty clever that they keep the "pay one time" option still alive while announcing the availability of subscription, so anyone who says "Boo, not you too Apple" can easily be shut down with "You still have the option to buy it!"

Probably not. Those customers are almost completely irrelevant and not people who Apple or anybody else cares about. They won't mind if you kick and scream.

tshaddox25 days ago

Yes, shame on them for only making good decisions now, instead of in the future.

TheCraiggers25 days ago

> but still clever of them to choose to do it later for PR purposes. 1-0 to Apple :)

They're doing it because it makes them more money. Corporations are not your friend.

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embedding-shape25 days ago
stanmancan25 days ago

Parent isn’t insinuating otherwise. They’re saying the subscription model is more lucrative, so eventually they’ll remove the one time payment option, but keeping it as an option for the announcement keeps the bad PR at bay.

virgil_disgr4ce25 days ago

"PR purposes" IS doing it for money

dylan60425 days ago

So what about next year when all of the apps receive updates/upgrades? Will the paid-in-full versions receive the upgrade for free, or will they have upgrade prices? I remember the days of Adobe's annual version upgrades, and they were at least $99 per app. Using that as the basis, the Adobe subscription plan is not more expensive that just broken up into 12 payments. People that kept running v4 to avoid the upgrade prices eventually got left out as they could not open files provided to them from others using the most recent version. Let's not forget our history on the one-time purchase pros/cons

wrs25 days ago

These apps have provided free updates after initial purchase for many years already. It would be big news if that stopped.

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dylan60425 days ago
larkost25 days ago

These are being sold on Apple's AppStore, and there the model is that you get all of the updates for that App. Of course there is the work-around that some apps use, which is to create a new App (i.e.: MyApp vs MyApp2), which Apple could do at some point in the future.

The best one to watch at the moment is if Pixelmater Pro license holders from before it was bought by Apple get access to any of the new improvements.

concinds25 days ago

All companies should do this. Sometimes I want a one-time purchase. Sometimes I want to try the program for a few months and I prefer a cheap subscription over a big upfront cost. And very, very rarely, I'll prefer the subscription, even though it's more expensive over time, to support a cool indie studio with recurring revenue instead of one-time purchases that may dry up and lead to lack of interest from the devs.

dylan60425 days ago

This is my argument for the Adobe subscription. One day, I'm a photographer needing apps like Photoshop and Lightroom and After Effects (because I do a lot of timelapse). One day, I'm a graphic designer, so I need Photoshop and Illustrator. One day, I'm an editor, so Photoshop, Premiere, Illustrator, and After Effects. One day, I'm doing desktop publishing with Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign.

schappim25 days ago

This isn’t the whole story as one-time purchases will no longer have access to all new features without a subscription [1].

1. https://www.macrumors.com/2026/01/13/apple-creator-studio-ex...

NBJack25 days ago

For now. Let's not forget MS Office had a period like that as well. I give it five years max.

Someone123425 days ago

For *now.

Adobe also started out as a choice between subscription or buying. The only thing maybe keeping Apple honest is that their stuff isn't as popular.

iAMkenough25 days ago

Except certain features in the software will be reserved for subscribers only.

thecupisblue25 days ago

That's actually surprisingly cheap compared to other subscriptions in the industry, especially for such a high powered suite.

jonwinstanley25 days ago

As long as you buy a macbook to use it on, they are happy

dylan60425 days ago

They'd be even happier if you bought one of the Mac Studios or Mac Pro. Please, someone, anyone.

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kergonath25 days ago
philistine25 days ago

The competition for the Creator Studio is not exactly Adobe. Of course Apple will be happy to build on their offerings to be able to really take on Adobe, but this subscription is priced to compete with the online services popping up from nowhere that have stolen the ease of use market away from Adobe.

The real competition in this market in 2026 is Canva.

tln25 days ago

Canva, really? Is this looking forward at what is coming?

I see the rise of and have to deal with Canva-generated PDFs instead of Adobe Illustrator. So the low end market of video / animation, I could absolutely see Canva dominating. Doubt we'll see audio tools though.

Final Cut Pro -- Professional non-linear video editing * Canva? Partial: Best for social clips; lacks FCP’s RAW, multicam, and AI transcript tools.

Logic Pro -- Professional music production and MIDI sequencing * Canva? No: No DAW capabilities, plugin hosting, or live mixing.

Pixelmator Pro -- Advanced image editing and graphic design * Canva? Partial: Good for templates; lacks Pixelmator’s precision layers and AI retouching.

Motion -- 2D/3D motion graphics and cinematic effects * Canva? No: Canva uses presets; Motion offers granular keyframing and VFX creation.

Compressor -- Advanced media encoding and batch exporting * Canva? No: No control over specific codecs, bitrates, or pro output formats.

MainStage -- Live performance audio rig for stage use * Canva? No: No live audio processing or MIDI instrument hosting.

Keynote -- Cinematic presentations and slide decks * Canva? Yes: Canva’s primary competitor for collaborative, template-based slides.

Pages -- Word processing and page layout * Canva? Yes: Canva Docs is a direct alternative for visual/marketing documents.

Numbers -- Spreadsheets and data visualization * Canva? Yes: Canva Sheets handles basic data viz, though lacks Numbers' complex formulas.

philistine24 days ago

You're making your argument backward. The fact Apple can offer a bundle that includes a ton of features that Canva does not have right now does not mean that Canva is not a competitor! Canva just bought the whole Affinity suite and dumped it on the laps of its subscribers for no extra charge. They're on the warpath against Adobe. They want to dethrone them. Apple sees this battle and saw an opportunity to participate. They bought Pixelmator and bundled all their Pro apps together, making a very versatile bundle that is very different from the image editing heavy bundle of Adobe and Canva.

Apple can't take the market from professionals; they need the easel they learned at school. But they can definitely compete with Canva, whose market are untrained artists who need something done easily.

girvo25 days ago

With Canva’s ownership of Affinity, yeah I see Canva as being a big competitor in parts of this space now. Or will be as those tools become more widespread across Canva’s users.

brk25 days ago

That was my thinking. I already use several of these apps, the $130/mo. is a no brainer to pick up the others.

rchaud25 days ago

Get them in the door now and jack up the price later.

Towaway6925 days ago

Undercut the competition until there is no competition, then raise prices or have I missed something?

Ah, yes - cross finance your loses by selling compute in your own data centres / hosting service because you can.

thecupisblue25 days ago

I would assume it's because younger generations of creatives are using their software less and less, increasing the risk of losing the market completely on the software side. At this pricing, more of them will turn to paying Apple rather than paying for multiple services, keeping them tied into the ecosystem.

Also so many people are paying for Canva, Capcut etc that taking a piece of that cake is quite a low hanging fruit if you have a distribution platform.

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no_wizard25 days ago
exitb25 days ago

Apple doesn't ever need to make much money on this software, when they make money on hardware needed to use it.

+1
sofixa25 days ago
Towaway6924 days ago

Most of the comments here demonstrates the lack of abstraction abilities here at HN.

My comments weren’t related to whether apple has data centres or not (afaik they don’t and actually use google hardware).

My comments were related to a business model used by amazon to destroy local shops in our neighbourhoods: offer products at vastly reduced prices, making a loss but covering those losses by profiting on aws. Once there is no competition left, prices rise and shareholder profits are made.

Hence my conjecture that apple was doing the same and hence they were offering this product at undercut price. As was the OP was wondering about.

I was actually criticising the business model increasingly used by big tech. Which has the consequences that are neighbourhoods are emptied out and left with stores that act as amazon package pickup stores or stores where packages are returned to be sent back to amazon.

beernet25 days ago

Not an Apple fan at all, but damn, in the views of some of the HN community, one can only do wrong. Pathetic.

embedding-shape25 days ago

Pretty spot on. I think what's new is that Apple is employing this tactic, before they always went with "Our stuff is more expensive because it's better", but as they seem to slightly pivot into other directions now, this choice also seems to align with the new direction.

crazygringo25 days ago

Somehow I don't think Apple is going to put Adobe out of business.

+1
echelon25 days ago
sleepybrett25 days ago

They don't need to, but they do lose a bunch more of the 'feeder' market. If need to edit video to a semi professional standard I'd pick this bundle at 12.99/month (and get extra tools i might need) vs adobe premiere for 22.99/month.

As someone who came up along side adobe, the only reason photoshop is as entrenched as it is is simply because of piracy. Ditto for premiere. It created the market that they then locked down with subscriptions.

I think you are going to see shops that are smaller, doing their own design stuff internally, increasingly moving away from adobe subscriptions.

nozzlegear25 days ago

What data centers? Does Apple even have data centers? Can people purchase compute on Apple's data centers?

+1
darrenf25 days ago
btown25 days ago

As someone who's loved Logic Pro since the days before Apple bought Emagic, this is amazing that it will be accessible to a broader audience.

There are many discussions e.g. https://gearspace.com/board/music-computers/1433515-why-does... about the reasons for its popularity, but one stands out to me - its event data model.

There are far too many tools out there (from FL Studio on one end, to MuseScore on the other) that present piano-roll-based rapid prototyping and traditional western score notation as diametric opposites. From day 1, Logic challenged itself "what if we can use the same event-based data model to render both."

None of this complexity is hidden - you can edit the raw event stream directly. If you're a developer familiar with, say, React, it makes music creation quite intuitive - everything from visual to audio output is a function of a transparently formatted data store.

And while that has its challenges, and some of the UX innovations of e.g. MuseScore have been slower to arrive in Logic, because of this "dual life" it's unmatched as a pedogogical tool, and a professional creative tool as well.

PaulDavisThe1st25 days ago

There's a lot of information in a traditional western score that cannot be easily represented in a pianoroll, at least not losslessly.

Considering them as alternate views of the same data model gets problematic when the composer uses the full bag of tricks that score notation allows (notably repeats, but also the problem of representing tuplets correctly when a pianoroll can offer no clues about how to structure them). So for example, the user can create a set of notes in the pianoroll that will never be played correctly by anyone reading the score; the user can create dynamics in the score that cannot be correctly presented in the pianoroll version.

I'm not saying it isn't possible to do an MVC-style system with two different views of the same data model - it clearly is. It's just moving between the two views is not lossless, and moving between the two controllers (i.e. editing) is not equivalent.

jmsgwd25 days ago

How else could you represent piano roll data than as a stream of events? I thought that was ubiquitous since the invention of MIDI.

Are you saying other sequencers are unable to render the same data as piano roll and score?

btown25 days ago

Among professional-ready DAWs, as far as I know, it's unique in its approach. Pro Tools and FL Studio still don't have score rendering or even MusicXML export! Reaper has limited score rendering/engraving support, but minimal customizability.

And on the notation-oriented side, you have things like MuseScore, Finale, etc. where there is an event model, but the UI itself doesn't have mature (or any) support for tracking mixer/knob automation (outside of what can be derived automatically from dynamic symbols).

Years ago, I used Logic in a musical theater context where I could build a constantly-updated demo for pitching/rehearsals/live-iteration and edit the final orchestration to be printed for the pit orchestra, both from the same living document. Could I have duplicated my changes in a DAW and notation software separately, and kept them in sync manually? Absolutely, and many creators do. But there's something special about having that holy grail at your fingertips.

+1
einr25 days ago
Forgeties7925 days ago

Not related to your comment exactly but I feel like I need to get this out in this thread somewhere:

As someone who defended FCPX and used it professionally for years even when it was at its most hated (2011 or so), it’s been woefully supported the last few years and no one should be on it anymore. Resolve Studio outclasses it top to bottom for the same one-time cost and runs great on both MacOS and Windows. Linux it’s bumpy unfortunately but it does technically run lol

embedding-shape25 days ago

> Resolve Studio outclasses it top to bottom for the same one-time cost and runs great on both MacOS and Windows

Best 200-300 EUR I spent some years ago, and still receives free updates, Blackmagic Design is a really nice company. And, not only does Resolve run great on macOS and Windows, they have Linux native builds that run even better than it does with the same hardware using Windows, which is REALLY nice.

Forgeties7925 days ago

Oh interesting re: Linux. My understanding was it was rougher but maybe I should try myself!

+1
embedding-shape25 days ago
geerlingguy25 days ago

Not arguing against Resolve, but FCP is still great for edits.

It lacks some flashy social media features and modern conveniences for sure, but it's still a very good and widely used editor.

Forgeties7925 days ago

It lacks a lot more than flashy social media features - and given their biggest driver in the 2010’s was arguably YouTubers, they actually need more robust social media features. For starters, they just added voice isolation what? A year ago? That has been bog-standard for resolve and premiere for years now. The audio tools in general are still very subpar.

I used it professionally from 2011-2020 or so. Around 2020 the gaps in feature parity became wider and more apparent, it’s clearly not a priority anymore. Once I went to resolve I basically abandoned it. I use maybe every 6mo tops now for quick stuff for friends and family or to open an old project.

The one thing I will say is for speed cutting, it’s probably the best. And that’s no small thing! But that’s about it.

+1
bombcar25 days ago
dangoodmanUT25 days ago

Thank god they preserved the one time purchase. I bought all of these apps back in like ~2013 and have been using them for literally 13 years with all updates (fcp, compressor, motion)

good on them

bombcar25 days ago

It's rare for a company to not only offer one-time purchases, and keep updating them, but also not rebranding/renaming/version cut-off charging at some point.

tarentel25 days ago

It helps that you have to continue to buy their hardware to keep running said software. I guess they could be greedy and keep making me pay for Logic every few years so I'm happy they don't do that but they're still making money off my initial purchase of logic just in a different way.

g947o25 days ago

I thought they basically gave away Keynote/Pages etc to anyone with an Apple device?

yohannparis25 days ago

It's literally in the introduction of the page.

> plus new AI features and premium content in Keynote, Pages, and Numbers

g947o25 days ago

So it's the GP comment that is inaccurate.

hmbakhsh25 days ago

Potentially AI slop features coming to both that they'll charge for?

ksec25 days ago

>Comes out January 28th

I wonder why? Why not today but 28th of Jan?

Part of me thinks M5 MacBook Air and M5 Pro MacBook Pro will also be released on January 28th.

ksec24 days ago

Well I guess either Great Mind thinks alike or they just read my HN comment

https://9to5mac.com/2026/01/14/apple-may-have-hinted-at-a-hi...

fckgw25 days ago

Mac Studio is still on M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips.

I could see a press release refresh on that day to M5 chips.

systemtest25 days ago

Could be related to billing cycles

ExoticPearTree25 days ago

I would like this to be very true. Can’t wait to get the new Air.

drcongo25 days ago

That's actually a hell of a deal considering I already pay $5 a month just for Logic on the iPad.

apercu25 days ago

I bought Logic maybe 8-9 years ago, and get free upgrades.... If I had paid $5/mo it would already have cost me ~$280.00 more than I paid.

Even if I had to purchase an occasional update (assuming they were reasonably priced), I'd still be coming out ahead.

I hate "renting" software.

drcongo25 days ago

Oh yeah, my Logic for Mac is probably about that age too, but there's no choice to buy it outright on iPad sadly.

Fnoord25 days ago

I bought a license for Pixelmator Pro a couple of years ago. IIRC it cost 30 or 40 EUR. I don't use it much, but it is unlikely you're going to need all of that software.

apercu25 days ago

Oh, didn't know that. That's lame.

I could see using an iPad for automation, triggered by midi, but I use an Air for that (and even if I used an my Pro, I still have to use a USB C hub because for some reason Apple things 1 (or 2) USB ports is enough. Sigh.

xattt25 days ago

> Educational discount with verification required drops the price to $2.99/mo / $29.99/yr.

Guess it’s time to take some online self-paced courses at a university for no reason in particular …

sleepybrett25 days ago

Meanwhile the subscription for Adobe Premiere ALONE is 22.99/mo

FireBeyond25 days ago

Yeah, I'm pissed that the Photography plan (Lightroom/Photoshop) has gone from 9.99/mo to 24.99/mo in the last 18 months.

prodigycorp25 days ago

time to dust off that 20 year old edu email address. with these discounts, college has paid for itself!

yardie25 days ago

I finally had to give mine up. Needed to reset the password which required a trip to 4HELP office and I live halfway around the globe now. But the kiddo will be starting college soon so I can mooch off their edu email address.

qingcharles25 days ago

Ah, I've been mooching off an old library card for years to rent books for my Kindle. Finally got an email saying "Just pop into your local branch to renew this year." Ah...

bookofjoe25 days ago

YES! I was a happy Kanopy movie viewer until last year I got a message that my library card no longer worked on Kanopy and I had to physically go in to the library to get a new one. Maybe someday....

+1
yardie25 days ago
SirMaster25 days ago

That almost never works for me, they usually use a service that verifies current student enrollment like SheerID.

WmWsjA6B29B4nfk25 days ago

If you are planning anyway to break the terms of the license and effectively steal the software, why even bother paying something for the privilege? Just get it for free, surely it has to be available cracked

embedding-shape25 days ago

> break the terms of the license and effectively steal the software

We're all (mostly/some) software people here, you don't need to use terms established by the "anti-piracy" firms to make your point, no one is "stealing" anything here, even if they were getting it for free from TPB or whatever.

+2
renewiltord25 days ago
qingcharles25 days ago

When I moaned to the Adobe support person about a recent price hike they said "It's a real shame you haven't signed up for a free educational course online, like the ones from Google, that would qualify you for a student plan. Or have you? I'll wait here while you tell me if you are enrolled in one of those free Google courses. Take as long as you need."

So now I'm getting an education too.

Fnoord25 days ago

Cracked software has risks attached to it, such as malware.

prodigycorp25 days ago

Spare me the morality play. Apple gifted Donald Trump a 24k gold statue! They will gift me an educational discount to Final Cut Pro.

+2
WmWsjA6B29B4nfk25 days ago
lifetimerubyist25 days ago

won't somebody think of the poor trillion dollar company!

benterix25 days ago

Make the one-time purchase while you still can. The educational version is a great value, and the license allows the software to be used for commercial purposes.

simjnd25 days ago

But Keynote, Pages and Numbers are already free

butterisgood24 days ago

Hopefully staying as such. I like Numbers, but I suspect I could totally replace my use of it with Emacs org-mode.

aobdev25 days ago

From the subheading: “plus new AI features and premium content in Keynote, Pages, and Numbers”

Rebelgecko25 days ago

Seems like a great "opportunity" for Apple to pump up their Services revenue

butterisgood24 days ago

I thought Keynote, Pages, and Numbers were complimentary. Or part of an iCloud subscription or something. Is that changing?

cultofmetatron25 days ago

the other benefit is that subs can be a sort of extended trial. Ive been wanting to try out final cut pro but I don't want to do a full video project if i'm going to be evaluating it. better to have 1-3 months to really know before I plunk down 299 bucks.

tarentel25 days ago

They offer a 3 month trial already.

kolanos25 days ago

Does this mean Keynote and Pages are now paid products? Aren't they included with Mac OS?

aobdev25 days ago

From the subheading: “plus new AI features and premium content in Keynote, Pages, and Numbers”

deafpolygon25 days ago

My concern here is are they going to start locking features for Pages, Numbers, and Keynote behind a paywall? Yes, it’s free—but will they still have all of the newer features without a subscription?

mrkstu25 days ago

I’m assuming that they’re going to (fairly) lock AI generative features behind the subscription since they’ll be incurring ongoing costs.

apparent25 days ago

They'll be pressured by gdocs and other similar products to not keep too much of this behind a paywall. I already don't know anyone who loves using Pages (every time I share a document I have to export it to .docx, which is annoying), so they're already starting off behind by a bit.

flenserboy25 days ago

I think many more would be on to Pages if they realized it was more than a simple WP. It's especially great for personal use, where there's no non-Mac sharing needed — there's no simpler layout program out there, & the typographic options are nice to have. If I have something longer/more detailed to put together, that's what ()LaTeX, Inkscape, etc., is for. We need alternate app ecosystems out there, & it's nice that Apple hasn't left these apps to rot like they did back in the 2010s.

+1
seec24 days ago
deafpolygon25 days ago

I really enjoy Pages, but if they’re going to lock stuff behind a paywall — it might be time to look at other things. I can’t afford to add a whole bunch of new subscriptions.

lemonlime22725 days ago

The individual one time purchase versions are still available for all the apps. Final Cut, Logic, Motion, Compressor, and MainStage are offered in a bundle for education by Apple as a $199.99 one time purchase (no education status is verified) [1]. Pixelmator Pro is available as a one time purchase as well for $49.99 [2]. Not included in the Creator Studio is the Lightroom alternative Photomator, which is available as a one time purchase of $119.99. You could recreate just the Creator Studio as a one time $250 purchase, or the entire suite (including Photomator) for $370.

Not available for one time purchase are the AI features and templates available for the free apps (Keynote, Pages, Numbers, Freeform).

Personally, I'm glad that one time purchases are still options for the core pro suite: long term they do hold value compared to paying Adobe a subscription (or dealing with the high seas on macOS). However, I don't see things like the education bundle sticking around much longer, so purchase it sooner rather than later.

[1]: https://www.apple.com/us-edu/shop/product/bmge2z/a/pro-apps-...

[2]: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/pixelmator-pro/id1289583905

lemonlime22725 days ago

Additional info: Final Cut Pro is going to keep getting updates, but certain features (presumably AI related) are not going to be included with the one time purchase and are gated to the subscription [1].

[1]: https://www.apple.com/final-cut-pro/#:~:text=A%20one%2Dtime%...

no_wizard25 days ago

The inclusion of Pixelmator Pro is simply so they no longer have a hole in the software lineup as a competitor vs Affinity (I think the real competitor to this bundle) and Adobe

I think they view Photos as a viable replacement for Lightroom and equivalents.

admp25 days ago

Photomator would be a more level Lightroom alternative, odd it's not included in the new Creator Studio package.

AlanYx25 days ago

That's probably a clue that maintaining Photomator is not on Apple's long-term roadmap. I imagine they'll merge some features into Photos and eventually discontinue it.

agos25 days ago

That would be the third photo editing software that I like that Apple discontinues and I would very much not like it

usef-25 days ago

Photos would need a lot of work to rival Photomator.

If they're essentially shutting down Photomator development, after doing similar with Aperture many years ago, they do seem very determined to drive people to Lightroom....

silveira25 days ago

Thanks for the info, I was looking for this. I have the "Pro Apps Bundle for Education" that I bought years ago and it is an fantastic deal.

LoganDark24 days ago

Did Photomator increase in price? I seem to remember buying a lifetime license for $79.99.

jwr25 days ago

After Apple suddenly discontinued Aperture, which left users like me with huge complex photo archives hanging, I will never trust any professional software tool from Apple again. It is a disaster that I still haven't fully recovered from.

I've learned my lesson — all my archives will now be maintained by me, in file structures, with metadata in text files.

incanus7725 days ago

Me too, with Aperture. Huge misstep and insult to the user base.

This is a useful tool: https://github.com/cormiertyshawn895/Retroactive

However, you still need to run an older OS. I've still got on my todo list the process of fixing all of this.

redundantly25 days ago

It's been a decade and it still hurts that it was discontinued.

dgxyz25 days ago

Learned that lesson too. Then got into Lightroom. Now getting out of that by exporting stuff slowly. Moving to files on disk and edits in Darktable now. No "library".

trinix91225 days ago

Not only Aperture. The FCP7-FCPX transition was a disaster as well.

movedx25 days ago

Please don’t take this as me saying you were wrong to ever trust Apple, however the best way to organise any data is usually just files on a disk.

That’s becoming a recurring theme for me and even some of my corporate clients now. Confluence, for example, is out the window for secure documentation around sensitive environments and Word Docs in One Drive are back in. It’s surprisingly refreshing and gets the job done way better.

m46325 days ago

From what I recall, aperture did use files-on-a-disk, maintaining original photos read-only and letting everything else be operations on those originals.

(am I recalling correctly?)

dgxyz25 days ago

Agree with all of this, apart from possibly OneDrive but that's for another post.

Not Apple-specific really that point for sure anyway. Personally I don't think we should ever ever trust any vendor to control our data or act as a proxy for access to it. If it's not on a physical disk in your hands, in a format which is documented and can be opened by more than one application, then you're one step away from being screwed. There are so many tangible risks we love to sweep under the rug from geopolitics, commercial stability, security, bugs to unexpected side effects. And I've seen some real horror stories on all of those fronts.

At the same time I managed to embed myself thoroughly in it and I'm 3 months in to undoing the mess. It's VERY hard to get back to files on disk. No moving away from that is probably the best option I suspect a lot of us never took.

Hardest stuff to get out of is iCloud/Apple and Adobe.

jwr24 days ago

It's all true, but if you think organizing photo archives is easy, boy have I got news for you.

Metadata, versions, version groupings, projects, albums, there is lots of structure that most people don't realize exists.

Think every picture has an EXIF date and that's the date when it was taken? Think again. Scanning date is not the same as picture date.

Actually, even if you think of a date, you probably imagine the usual ISO8601 2026-01-14T17:37:46Z date — how about when we only know a year? This is something Aperture didn't do either, but when dealing with photo archives what you want is arbitrary precision date intervals. E.g. 1900-1902 for example.

Anyway. Just pointing out that even though "just files on disk" is the right approach, managing those files and their metadata is far from obvious.

f_allwein25 days ago

Power tip: replace the Word docs with Markdown.

UqWBcuFx6NV4r25 days ago

Thinking that Markdown is comparable to a Word doc for even most purposes is delusional.

wtallis24 days ago

Markdown should work reasonably well for the use case of Confluence pages that have been moved into Word docs.

LgWoodenBadger25 days ago

The Aperture discontinuation still pains me as well. Especially since I can't even run it anymore.

I also bought Final Cut Express. Not sure I'll buy Apple software again either.

steve197725 days ago

Logic users on Windows also weren't too happy when Apple bought Emagic and dropped Windows support shortly after.

fidotron25 days ago

> These apps will continue receiving updates, with the latest versions adopting the beautiful new visual design language with Liquid Glass on all platforms

Are the Apple people really this oblivious, or is someone in PR trolling us?

pier2525 days ago

They don't have much of a choice. They bet the house on liquid glass and need to keep up appearances.

reddalo25 days ago

I think they just need to wait a bit and then present something more sensible as the new hot design.

mh226625 days ago

> They bet the house on liquid glass

How? If they reverted to the previous iOS and macOS designs, Apple would go out of business?

chipotle_coyote25 days ago

Of course not, but I'd rephrase what the OP said as something more like "it's unrealistic to expect them to go 'hey, guess what, never mind about all that' after a half a year.

I think it's more realistic to expect that they're going to stick with a UI officially called "Liquid Glass" for the next decade, but it's going to go through some serious iterative changes in the next couple of years -- probably much more than it would have were Alan Dye still around.

pier2525 days ago

God only knows how much money they invested into the new GUI engine for all their platforms. It was a super expensive bet.

+1
lII1lIlI11ll25 days ago
msabalau25 days ago

When you are in a hole you can at least stop digging.

codebyaditya25 days ago

I read it less as obliviousness and more as internal language leaking into marketing. What’s “Liquid Glass” to Apple reads like an aesthetic system though but to outsiders it sounds like jargon inflation. I feel the gap between internal coherence and external clarity shows up in these releases a lot.

nottorp25 days ago

> like an aesthetic system

An idiotic aesthetic system that ignores all the human interface guidelines that the Apple of 30+ years ago helped start.

faust20125 days ago

Pretty sure these marketing speak was decided half-an-year before. Sales and marketing just do their job

/S

guestbest25 days ago

It sounds like internally it’s a checklist item they have to mention everywhere.

cons0le25 days ago

Yep, it's not trolling, it's just them doing the job. A well paid lawyer will defend a client even if they're guilty

12345hn678925 days ago

A well paid lawyer defending a guilty client is upholding the Justice system. Every man has a right to a fair trial.

Apple wasting years of everyones time on bad faith UX design

raw_anon_111125 days ago

You’ve never worked at BigCorp have you? At Amazon, part of the initial indoctrination when I was hired there was competitive messaging when talking to clients (I worked in ProServe) and what you were never allowed to say. I remember we could never say we had a “moat”.

I’m sure there is approved marketing copy.

bromuro25 days ago

I like the Liquid Glass design so this is a point for me.

elzbardico25 days ago

[flagged]

matthoiland25 days ago

Dear Apple, Please do not add liquid glass to your professional applications. Keep it simple, gray, performant, and functional. Thank you.

sneak25 days ago

Doesn’t matter. The apps run on the OS, the latest hardware only runs the OS at the hardware release date and later. You’re getting the Fisher-Price UI whether you want it or not, even if the apps never change a thing.

inatreecrown224 days ago

Next version will probably "build on Liquid Glass", while moving away from it. At least that's my guess.

storus25 days ago

I guess it's enforced top-down. Yesterday I picked up my MacBook from a logicboard repair and they forced Tahoe on it despite running Sonoma originally so I spent most of yesterday getting rid of Tahoe and reverting back to Sonoma.

Fnoord25 days ago

Sonoma won't receive updates for long any more. Better off switching to Sequoia. It'll give you 20 months to switch away, instead of 8 months.

storus25 days ago

Each new macOS version brings new restrictions causing some essential apps to stop working or work in a more complicated way so I keep delaying macOS upgrades as late as possible. macOS used to be an OS that lowered my cognitive complexity but that's no longer true these days due to security overreach.

einr25 days ago

As a macOS sysadmin I feel this in my bones, and of course I don't know what apps are essential for you, but FWIW Sequoia has been basically identical to Sonoma for me. In fact I had to double check what I was running on this computer before writing this because there's just no functional or aesthetic difference that I know of off the top of my head.

(And yes, I'm holding off on Sonoma for as long as possible because... yuck)

sgustard25 days ago

At least in the screenshots I did not notice absurdly large window corner radii.

lynndotpy25 days ago

Because every app is presented in fullscreen. Showing the windowing system would make sense if this was announced pre-LG.

baggachipz25 days ago

Have you never had to toe a company line before?

blitzar25 days ago

someone in PR is trolling

the beatings with liquid glass will continue till morale improves

DonHopkins25 days ago

Apple no longer supports GL, so Liquid Glass - GL = Liquid Ass.

geerlingguy25 days ago

I still miss Aperture. Photos is a far cry still, many years later.

Lightroom never matched Aperture's organizational abilities for libraries with tens of thousands of RAW photos.

apgwoz25 days ago

I’ve been waiting to see what happens with Photomator, and the fact that it’s not being included in anyway here makes me think it might not survive? Either that, or it’s gonna be heavily integrated into Photos…

herrherrmann25 days ago

I was also surprised to not see Photomator included. Wouldn’t it perfectly complement the lineup? I hadn’t thought of such a pessimistic interpretation, but now I’m worried as well …

apgwoz25 days ago

I think Apple killed Aperture primarily because it was confusing to have iPhoto and Aperture with largely overlapping workflows. Aperture had the loupe view, and side by side comparison stuff, saved color grading tools (I think?), sure, but it wasn’t differentiated enough to justify a Pro designation. I think it makes more sense for Photomator features to be absorbed into Photos… and maybe Photos gets some new Pixelmator integrations if you have it, for quick touch ups / enhancement type things.

On the other hand, Final Cut / iMovie will exist side by side because it’s truly a basic vs Pro situation.

Not a product manager at Apple, of course, but this is what logically seems to make sense.

+1
herrherrmann25 days ago
+1
dbbk24 days ago
jeffbee25 days ago

I mean, the friendly way to kill off the differences between Aperture and Photos would have been to add all the missing workflow stuff to Photos before killing Aperture. Photos did not get lift-and-stamp edits until late 2022, years after Aperture was discontinued, and it isn't as good as the corresponding feature in Aperture was. Also, it would have been cool if the Photos import from Aperture library had ever worked, even a little bit. I keep an external hard drive around with my old Aperture library because I know it contains photos that Photos.app still hasn't pulled in correctly.

squidsoup25 days ago

Frustrating that Photos is really not suitable for anything other than editing snaps. I'd love to ditch Adobe, but Darktable doesn't support Fuji raws, and there really aren't that many great commercial alternatives to Lightroom that don't also have a subscription model.

trop24 days ago

> but Darktable doesn't support Fuji raws

darktable has supported Fuji raws since 2014! It currently supports the classic "uncompressed" RAFs, as well as the newfangled "lossless" (compressed) RAFs. I do not believe that it supports the "compressed" (lossy) format. So setting "recording type" appropriately on your camera is necessary.

I'm curious where the notion comes from that there is no support for Fujifilm RAF files, as I see this in a cousin comment as well.

haunter25 days ago

I wish there was something like GOG but for old general software

Arubis25 days ago

Apple dropping Aperture right after I landed stateside was enough to knock me out of the photography hobby entirely.

canbus25 days ago

Tried Darktable?

data-ottawa25 days ago

For me it didn't work with Fuji RAW, so I couldn't really use it.

ksec25 days ago

This is Off Topic, but the first thing I notice on that page were those icons for apps with Apple Creator Studio.

They look AWEFUL.

concinds25 days ago

It's a massacre. The originals[0] were metaphorical and easy to grasp. These new ones are meaningless, for most of them you can't guess what the app does from the icon. The beautiful 3-axis colorwheel gimbal, gone. The concert access badge, gone. The pressed record award replaced with a disc? Is that the MP3 player app?

And Final Cut Pro looks like Windows 11's garbage free ClipChamp! None of them have the gravitas of the old ones.

It's weird because uniformity and minimalism haven't been "in" in years, outside the Silicon Valley bubble. They're very culturally out of touch.

[0]: https://www.reddit.com/r/MacOS/comments/1qbz6g8/whos_excited...

ksec24 days ago

Oh Thank You for the link. Exactly what I am talking about. You dont have to like or agree with every icons beings used previously, but at least they serve its purpose which is easily recognisable.

I saw the new icon and it nearly made me puke. Had it been coming from Google or Microsoft I would have thought oh not surprised.

MattRix25 days ago

I don’t think they look awful, and they’re more interesting and opinionated than most boring icons you see these days.

simjnd25 days ago

They're definitely awful compared to the icons they're replacing. Losing so much identity and detail.

MattRix24 days ago

Eh not sure I agree. The former icons are definitely unique, but not consistent or cohesive at all, especially when viewed as a group.

I think these new icons will grow on people. There were similar negative reactions back ~15 years ago when Adobe switched to their minimalist icon style.

+1
simjnd24 days ago
lexoj25 days ago

It has that new slop aesthetics.

steve197725 days ago

Yup, looks like they have been created by some intern with Image Playground.

toddmorey25 days ago

TERRIBLE! Can’t believe Apple is using these.

andsoitis25 days ago

> Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Motion, Compressor, and MainStage — plus new AI features and premium content in Keynote, Pages, and Numbers — come together in a single subscription

So Apple is copying Adobe's business model?

bayindirh25 days ago

No, all apps are available for purchase for a one time payment.

I don't care about video, so I'll be buying Pixelmator now, and maybe music stuff later, and Video part never.

So it works like before, if you want.

andrei_says_25 days ago

Pixelmator is great and integrates well with Apple's tooling for batch processing.

For video, the free version of DavinciResolve goes a very long way, and their Studio is a single-payment-life-time license.

lynndotpy25 days ago

DaVinci Resolve also runs on Linux, so you won't be locked to staying on MacOS if you want to switch OSes but maintain your skillset.

bearjaws25 days ago

Available for purchase... for now.

bayindirh25 days ago

The only "...for now" event I have seen in last 20 years of Apple software is iWorks and Mac OS X become free.

...and they integrated some of the Aperture to new Photos app, which is again was a transition to free.

Name me something a product, not a service which you can only subscribe in Apple's ecosystem.

+1
arvinsim25 days ago
+1
ascagnel_25 days ago
boringg25 days ago

Well really they are copying the original Microsofts suite packaging which everyone has copied over the years! But yes specific they are trying to take market share on Adobe.

Its actually like taking on MS and Adobe together... but they aren't really taking on MS office.

mirzap25 days ago

How so? Apple's subscription cancellation is one click away, and you don't get overcharged when canceling.

acomjean25 days ago

Subscription model so it’s adobes model. But you can buy “one time”. Though they have a tendency to just end product support (aperture software was canceled leaving a lot of bad taste for photographers that used it)

Wonder what Adobe thinks of this. Their support for Mac was pretty important in getting OS X off the ground, now they’re competing with a unified stack.

When I was a Mac user I remember buying Logic express 9 (I still have the disk). The price is a good deal, but you really are all in forever..

jpalomaki25 days ago

Depends on if you are stuck with the subscription for life, or if there's actually a reasonable way to unsubscribe.

bambax25 days ago

You're never free to unsubscribe because you become accustomed to the tools, and use the file formats, etc. (That's why I don't do subscription, ever.)

Someone25 days ago

FTA: “Alternatively, users can also choose to purchase the Mac versions of Final Cut Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Logic Pro, Motion, Compressor, and MainStage individually as a one-time purchase on the Mac App Store.”

tapoxi25 days ago

Yeah but this is $129/yr, that's significantly cheaper

whywhywhywhy25 days ago

It’s cheap enough it’s not enough to fund development of Final Cut but also not enough money to bother spending time on it. Find it odd personally, just offering them free to keep hardware makes more sense than trying to push a tiny subscription revenue number.

alwillis25 days ago

> It’s cheap enough it’s not enough to fund development of Final Cut but also not enough money to bother spending time on it. Find it odd personally, just offering them free to keep hardware makes more sense than trying to push a tiny subscription revenue number.

Apple doesn't work that way.

Unlike almost all other tech companies that are organized by divisions, Apple uses a functional organizational structure.

So all of the software teams are under one head of software; there's no senior vp of the Final Cut division, for example.

For accounting purposes, all software is lumped together.

Apple made $391 billion in revenue last fiscal year; when you're making that kind of money, you can afford to do things for reasons other than the amount of money you could make.

Whatever revenue Final Cut generates isn't required to fund the Final Cut team.

+1
whywhywhywhy24 days ago
vile_wretch25 days ago

$129/year is surely better than $300 once, 15 years ago. Though I'm guessing not offering it for free is to keep it distinct from iMovie and to maintain some semblance of "Pro"-ness (which I'm gathering is up for debate either way.. the last time I did any actual video editing it was on Final Cut Pro 5 so I'm out of the loop)

anticorporate25 days ago

It's the problem that the whole industry is facing - the current generation of hardware is sufficient that hardware refreshes will continue to decline, and companies that want to keep milking us for money regularly need to find a new way to do it.

+1
alwillis25 days ago
no_wizard25 days ago

Sufficient for whom? At my job they’re still refreshing workstations regularly. They buy and churn hardware on a regular basis.

Not quite “buying on release week” basis but some % of employees always getting new hardware at max specs in the design org

Makes even engineering jealous sometimes

+1
rstupek25 days ago
pier2525 days ago

One might argue it offers significantly less value too.

F7F7F725 days ago

Adobe invented subscription bundles? In that sense did the Creative Cloud copy iCloud?

pjmlp25 days ago

When there are no more new buyers to sell devices, or new versions of existing software packages, the only way to keep the curve growing for shareholders and MBAs is to sell subscriptions.

It is also the only way to convince developers to pay for software.

Having a part hosted on some server is so much better than whatever anti-piracy schemes one can think of, and provides the continuous growth curve for printing money.

Thus subscriptions aren't going away in the modern software world.

tomovo25 days ago

It's a pity Apple didn't choose to acquire Affinity when there was a chance. Pixelmator Pro looks like a toy app compared to Logic or Final Cut. I don't see how it could ever catch up to Photoshop. Even at such small scale it's always been very buggy in my experience and development seems to have stalled (apart from some obligatory AI features).

I am glad the standalone purchases are still available and I assume they will stay updated in sync with the subscription-based ones. I would hate my copy of Logic getting slowly obsolete..

philistine25 days ago

Affinity never made mac-assed Mac apps. Pixelmator is more a Mac app than Messages or Music. That's why they bought them instead of Affinity.

tomovo25 days ago

Maybe. Form over function, not a surprise.

philistine24 days ago

A truly well-designed Mac app is not just form, it is function as well. If you think a good Mac citizen is only what it looks like you're not looking at all.

tomovo23 days ago

Sadly mac-assedness doesn't automatically mean feature richness or overall robustness. Those are actually quite hard to achieve when you spend half of each year updating the UI widgets to the latest SDK and fixing new performance problems you didn't cause. That should be clear when you compare Affinity Photo and Pixelmator Pro.

Petersipoi25 days ago

Your experience couldn't be more different than mine. I love Pixelmator Pro. One of my favorite apps on my computer. Super quick and snappy. Does what I need it to. Which doesn't mean it does what everyone needs it to. I get that it isn't a Photoshop replacement. But not everyone needs a Photoshop replacement.

handsclean25 days ago

Your experience is starkly different than mine. Are you sure you aren’t thinking of Pixelmator, Pixelmator Pro’s much more toy-like predecessor from ~10 years ago?

My experience is that while there’s a feature and community gap for both Pixelmator Pro and Affinity, Affinity just tried to copy Photoshop, positioning it as a worse but cheaper Photoshop, while Pixelmator Pro feels like an attempt to make a better photo editor, losing some familiarity points but also being tangibly better than Photoshop at most use cases it can handle, which is many. It’s also an excellent macOS citizen. Between those two factors, it seems much more up Apple’s alley.

tomovo25 days ago

I guess it depends a lot on the use cases. I've used both the original Pixelmator app and the "Pro" may have been a rewrite internally but it didn't feel like a significant step up for me at the time, more like a rebrand and a way to charge for it again. And so many bugs. The development team did respond to a few of my bug reports, which was nice.

seec24 days ago

Yeah, in my experience, Pixelmator looks the part but isn't a very good software, especially for vectors. Affinity stuff doesn't look as good but gets much closer to Adobe quality tools.

H1Supreme25 days ago

Seems like a pretty solid deal, if you need everything. I don't know who that person is though. The intersection between Final Cut Pro and Logic users is pretty small, I'd imagine.

54245825 days ago

TBF, you can say the same thing for adobe creative cloud - the intersection between After Effects and Indesign users is also effectively nil!

But having one simple opex line item for "software I buy for the creative types" is appealing for a lot of orgs.

pier2525 days ago

But the CC subscriptions offers a lot more.

Photohsop, Illustrator and After Effects are pretty much industry standards.

srik25 days ago

Apple really should’ve grabbed Affinity before canva. Would’ve rounded out this suite much better.

pier2525 days ago

Yeah. The Affinity team with Apple's resources could have made an amazing Adobe CC alternative for Mac users.

doctorpangloss25 days ago

Yes, re: opex. The product is “renewals,” not software really.

pier2525 days ago

I'm that kind of user but I would rather not use Logic, Final Cut, or PixelMator unless Apple really improves those. On top of that there's also the platform lock-in concern.

dagmx25 days ago

There’s quite a few creative hobbyists and freelancers.

In a past life, I’d have fallen quite squarely in the latter and I still fall in the former.

Given this also extends to my family, it feels like a no-brainer replacement for creative cloud.

cush25 days ago

Subs like this are great for people who can’t afford the full versions yet

pjmlp25 days ago

I am still waiting for "XCode for iPadOS", where we can have a Smalltalk like approach to development, beyond what Swift Playgrounds allows for.

kmeisthax25 days ago

Unless Apple gets off several high horses regarding code signing and, more importantly, app containerization; any Xcode for iPadOS is going to be useless. Like, imagine Xcode without custom build steps or third-party compilers.

The larger problem is that the iPad has a dual nature. At the launch of the product, Apple positioned it as a netbook killer - i.e. a simplified computer for specific tasks, one where the locked down nature of the device might actually be considered a feature. That's why they built everything on iPhone OS[0]. However, there's always been the implication that this is supposed to Someday™ replace the Mac. It keeps getting new features to make it more useful as a computer replacement, which just makes the deliberate restrictions placed on the device more and more glaring. And Apple seems to think they can just keep adding features until they can make you do every computing task wearing a strait-jacket in a padded room.

This particular duality came to a head with the Apple Vision Pro. Any app that would actually be useful on a VR headset is either:

- Incompatible with Apple's code-signing and containerization requirements (i.e. developer tools)

- Not economic to offer at the small scale of the visionOS app market (at least, not while Apple is demanding 30%)

- A game (Apple really doesn't wanna talk about the Vision Pro as a games machine)

On a related note, Swift Playgrounds stopped getting updates almost a year ago. I updated my HTML editor demo project for iPadOS 26 and now I can't even compile it because Apple has yet to ship the version 26 SDK. And there's really nothing any third party can do to fix Swift Playgrounds to make it actually usable again.

[0] Strictly speaking, Apple's first internal demos of capacitive touch were for a tablet project specifically to spite Windows XP tablets. Although by the time they were writing actual shipping code it was intended for iPhone and iPad came later.

pjmlp25 days ago

Everyone that argues about this misses the point.

It isn't about doing and publishing apps without having to buy a mac.

Rather having a more powerful development experience that isn't as constrained as Swift Playgrounds, useful for prototyping ideas.

I do not care if in a similar vein, to a Smalltalk like environment I would always need to run the app from inside the dev env, and then use a Mac, or some cloud build workflow if I ever would like to actually publish it.

Just like I use several other coding on the go environments.

eurekin25 days ago

I played once with hosting a VSCode server on a raspberry pi for general development and it was actually quite powerful, when used from an iPad. Just not strictly for Swift unfortunately

ajcp25 days ago

I'm hosting a VSCode server with Termux/Ubuntu container on my old Pixel 6a and I cannot overstate how awesome it is for just a fun dev setup, especially with a tablet. Easy to nuke and start clean too!

qn9n25 days ago

The ecosystem is fine for non-Apple development. It's just building apps for iOS, macOS, etc. that is impossible on iPad right now past some basic applications.

bpavuk21 days ago

Apple hit all the buzzwords from Apple Bingo Card in the very first paragraph announcing their $13/mo creative suite subscription:

> Apple today unveiled Apple Creator Studio, a groundbreaking collection of powerful creative apps designed to put studio-grade power into the hands of everyone, building on the essential role Mac, iPad, and iPhone play in the lives of millions of creators around the world. The apps included with Apple Creator Studio for video editing, music making, creative imaging, and visual productivity give modern creators the features and capabilities they need to experience the joy of editing and tailoring their content while realizing their artistic vision. Exciting new intelligent features and premium content build on familiar experiences of Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Keynote, Pages, Numbers, and later Freeform to make Apple Creator Studio an exciting subscription suite to empower creators of all disciplines while protecting their privacy.

Count with me:

1. Groundbreaking

2. Powerful

3. Studio-grade

4. Power into the hands of everyone

5. Essential role of <INSERT APPLE PRODUCT(S)>

6. Exciting new

7. Familiar experiences

8. Empower

9. Privacy

---

P.S. is HN frontend open-source? I'd like to submit a fix for Markdown list rendering

al_borland25 days ago

Too bad they killed Aperture.

hbbio25 days ago

Now they acquired Photomator with Pixelmator, but it's still an independent subscription... not even included in this bundle. Maybe they just forgot.

qubex25 days ago

The only apps from Apple I give a sizeable fraction of a dam about are Pages and Numbers, and hopefully they’ll emerge from the scourge of AI largely unscathed.

thenaturalist25 days ago

I'm sorry to break it to you, but they certainly won't.

It's in the announcement and look at what Microslop and Google have done to their versions.

qubex24 days ago

Yeah I read that but what I meant (and failed to express clearly, I openly admit) is that I hope it doesn’t somehow become core functionality you’re kinda-sorta expected to have. Pages and Numbers work fine and I’d be willing to go back to paying for them as was true back in the iLife days (I still have an iLife ‘06 or ‘09 distribution CD or DVD on my shelf in a storeroom) but paying a subscription for creative apps I just never use just to get stuff everybody will expect you to have in productivity apps is a path I hope they don’t go down. Incidentally what Numbers really lacks is a circular converge-to-solution mode like Excel has had for decades, that would make it a serious tool tor simple business planning and financial projections.

Kye25 days ago

I'm keeping an eye on Graphite (https://graphite.art/) as something to move to from Affinity's stuff, but it's good there's a new option for people who need more.

krm0125 days ago

It’s actually a pretty big deal. I always wondered why they didnt compete with Adobe. Even when Steve Jobs was still around. 90%+ of Adobe users are on Macs.

Why though isn’t such a significant announcement on the Apple.com homepage?

mrkstu25 days ago

Because Adobe would have gone Windows only, which would have been a potentially fatal blow to Apple at the time. Same reason Claris was spun out.

timeon25 days ago

At least Acrobat reader is not relevant on macOS.

pentagrama25 days ago

Here is a quick side by side comparison between Apple Creator Studio and the Adobe Creative Cloud suite. Each app may be stronger or weaker depending on the use case, workflow, and specific user needs, so this is only a rough equivalence.

    Function            | Apple                | Adobe               | Adobe price / month
    --------------------|----------------------|---------------------|--------------------
    Image editing       | Pixelmator Pro       | Photoshop           | ~USD 20
    Video editing       | Final Cut Pro        | Premiere Pro        | ~USD 23
    Motion graphics     | Motion               | After Effects       | ~USD 23
    Audio production    | Logic Pro            | Audition            | ~USD 23
    Video encoding      | Compressor           | Media Encoder       | Included with Premiere Pro
    Live audio          | MainStage            | No direct equivalent| N/A
    Docs/presentations  | Keynote/Pages/Numbers| Express/Acrobat     | ~USD 10 to 24
    --------------------|----------------------|---------------------|--------------------
    TOTAL               | USD 12.99 / month    | ~USD 100+ / month   |
                        | (7 apps bundle)      | (5 apps separately)|
                        |                      | USD 69.99 / month  |
                        |                      | (bundle 20+ apps)  |

Disclaimer: table formatting assisted by ChatGPT (hope it works on HN).
mesh25 days ago

What this misses is that Creative Cloud is much more than a bundle of apps. It includes everything you need around the apps for pro workflows (i.e. fonts, AI, stock, collaboration, etc...).

(I work for Adobe)

DoctorOW25 days ago

A lot of those are paid extras. I know my Adobe CC didn't come with any stock credits.

mesh24 days ago

In general, they are included with CC.

More info here:

https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud.html

Svoka25 days ago

Pixelmator probably is Lightroom. And adobe has "Photography Bundle" with Lightroom and Photoshop for $20/mo.

mesh25 days ago

No, Lightroom is a dedicated photo editor and DAM.

Pixelmator is closer to Photoshop, you can do some photo editing, but its not focused on it, and does not have asset management.

ezfe25 days ago

No, Photomator (and Photos) is Lightroom. Pixelmator is Photoshop.

dormento25 days ago

Wow, RIP the icons I guess :/

andsoitis25 days ago

Excited to see whether the new Apple boss will lead to software innovation, which has been pretty stagnant the last few years.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/08/technology/apple-ceo-tim-...

kurishutofu25 days ago

When was the last time Apple made some significant update to its professional desktop apps?

tarentel25 days ago

Logic Pro gets regular updates. I believe most of it is AI driven nonsense but they are making changes. Flashback capture was a nice fairly recent addition and surprising this wasn't implemented sooner. There are also regular bug fixes and performance improvements. I can't speak for the other apps.

https://support.apple.com/en-afri/109503

joezydeco25 days ago

Forget that. TikTokers are the revenue stream now.

embedding-shape25 days ago

TikTokers ("influencers" in general) don't do their editing or any part of their "production pipeline" on computers, kids are doing the full thing via smartphones nowadays. Blew my mind initially too, as I always did "serious work" at a computer and never the phone, but seems they're managing it somehow.

no_wizard25 days ago

They often start there, some stay there, some graduate to an iPad, but a a lot of the higher end creators absolutely edit in desktops or laptops (usually MacBooks)

My old job dealt with this quite a lot as they were our target market, so I got some up close views of how for example, creators like MrBeast go about their editing (well the employees anyway)

Though I did note a lot of creators that do graduate to more robust software basically go from lightweight editor via Canva -> iMovie or equivalent -> professional software e.g. FCPX or Premiere

embedding-shape25 days ago

Yeah, that matches what I've seen too, bigger productions adopting a more traditional pipeline, while "influencers" or whatever they're called today, kind of stick with the tools they've learned, until they "graduate" as they expand the team and bring in actual professionals.

igufrcybh25 days ago

[dead]

rvz25 days ago

They use CapCut which is free and on the web and Google Docs.

To them what Apple just announced is trash.

reactordev25 days ago

Apple CC

Like Adobe CC

I love Logic and all but really?

I can’t help but notice Apple in the last decade has kind of been spinning in circles software wise while their hardware division makes breakthroughs with M-series chips.

2026, the year of the Linux Desktop…

spankalee25 days ago

Tangential, but: MainStage the best deal in the entire pro audio industry.

As a keyboard player who mainly plays (and owns) classic electro-mechanical keyboards like Hammonds, Rhodes, Clavinets, and Wurlitzers, Apple's emulators that they brought from Logic are really top-notch - often better than what you get with dedicated hardware.

$30 is an insane price for what it delivers. I just wish it were available for iPad, and I'd use it more for gigging.

speak_plainly25 days ago

This seems like an Apple AI subscription under the guise of a software bundle.

It’s a good value for some, especially if you want to use FCP, but seems like a bad value for most users who are expecting more value from their Mac purchase.

I wonder if new Macs will offer a three-month trial for this suite, or if the standard apps will be pre-installed and the AI features are unlocked through a subscription.

If bundled versions of iWork go away, we may see a renaissance for G Suite.

TimTheTinker25 days ago

Sounds plausible. Someone internally likely has AI sales numbers to meet, so creating new subscriptions and adding "AI" to them can help juice AI-related numbers toward that quota.

joshstrange25 days ago

In this thread: No one who has even skimmed the article

I'll say this loud for the people in the back: YOU CAN STILL BUY IT OUTRIGHT

They are still offering one-time purchases, calm down.

dsego25 days ago

But for how long?

kace9125 days ago

I don’t get why they think “professional” is a generic tier.

If I’m a music producer, what’s the value of being given a digital art drawing program? If I’m an illustrator, why do I need a cinema post production suite?

Some people might happen to do both, but overlap is largely accidental, right? The fact that they think of all professions as a bundle is even insulting as it signals the products are mostly toys/hobbyist stuff.

steve197725 days ago

I think that's why they call it "Creator" studio. Creators - in the way the term is usually used today - indeed do use many of these tools. Maybe you produce music, create a video about you producing music and also need an engaging thumbnail for YouTube.

In a feature film production, these would certainly be separate roles. But apart from maybe Logic Pro for composers, Apple's tools are not really relevant at those levels of the entertainment business anymore. Post-pro would be Pro Tools for audio, something like Avid Media Composer for editing etc.

I think Apple has realized they are not playing on that level anymore and target their marketing to where they are still in the game. That's not necessarily a bad move.

tarentel25 days ago

Tons of professionals use logic. Really, you will find money making musicians using any of the major daws. Pro tools might still be the standard for recording studios but that's likely it.

steve197725 days ago

My point was more that creators will often use more than one tool.

I know Logic is widespread amongst beat producers and songwriters, especially in the US. But you will also often see tracks getting produced on Logic but the final mix then happens on Pro Tools (by professional mixing engineers).

But that's why I explicitly mentioned Logic, I think it's the one pro app from Apple that still deserves the moniker, at least in regards to where it is used. The video stuff not so much anymore.

bigyabai25 days ago

Most musicians I know use Ableton or Bitwig on macOS. Logic Pro is really a hassle for collaboration and touring from what I've heard.

Forgeties7925 days ago

A lot of people round trip through various softwares to create things. As a film editor I use NLE’s, DAW’s, music production tools, various encoders (like compressor), graphic design tools…I’d say it’s the norm not the exception to need 2-3 specialized pieces of software during projects.

acuozzo25 days ago

> I don’t get why they think “professional” is a generic tier.

The target market is prosumer, not true professional.

vehemenz25 days ago

I don't think there's that much of a distinction.

The real difference is that a "true professional" already has the software—purchased at full price by themselves or by their employer—and doesn't need a subscription in the first place.

acuozzo25 days ago

The biggest distinction, in my experience, is that prosumers tend to be means-focused and professionals tend to be ends-focused, so there's less zealotry and evangelism in professional circles.

steve197725 days ago

Also in professional circles, there's usually one or two industry standards and you just use what everyone else is using.

vehemenz25 days ago

Many people that use professional tools are genuinely doing hobbyist stuff. Especially if they haven't already bought their tools outright.

But besides, this subscription works with Family Sharing and is only $12, so it looks easy to get your money's worth.

jen2025 days ago

> If I’m a music producer, what’s the value of being given a digital art drawing program? If I’m an illustrator, why do I need a cinema post production suite

Are you talking about Adobe here?

bigyabai25 days ago

Probably not, seeing as Creative Cloud has bundles focused on specific mediums.

jen2025 days ago

Their default is the "All" plan which includes many of the same categories as the Apple bundle.

arvinsim25 days ago

Is the one-time purchase versions guaranteed for life?

If not, then this would likely go the way of others before where it will eventually be removed.

prmoustache25 days ago

Nothing is ever guaranteed for life...except the promise of death.

me_online25 days ago

apple can pry my one-time final cut pro purchase from my cold, dead hands.

acomjean25 days ago

Many years ago, before Final Cut Pro x my cousin asked me to help inject some video from tapes and keep the time code. In Final Cut Pro. I couldn’t figure it out.

So in desperation I read the manual. It was seriously well written and I understood the program, what needed to be done and how to do it.

FootballMuse25 days ago

> A one-time purchase will still be available, but access to some of the premium content is available only to Apple Creator Studio subscribers. If you already own Final Cut Pro, it will continue to be updated.

Looks like some new "premium content" features will be only available to those with a subscription

ulfw24 days ago

I am done with Apple. They've become a company only extracting money on the margins rather than innovating. Most products are stale, especially on the software side. Asking for yet another subscription is what makes the boiling kettle run over.

maomaomiumiu23 days ago

This sounds really cool, but I honestly can’t imagine stopping using Adobe apps after so many years and switching to completely new tools. It feels like that would take a lot of time and effort to relearn everything.

zuInnp25 days ago

Last thing I did when I was a student was to buy the Apple pro apps bundle for education. It still haven't regretted it :D

So, if you are a student, you can get logic, final cut, motion, compressor and mainStage for $199.99 for ever.

oliyoung25 days ago

An Aperture-like is still the stand out missing piece here, especially when you have the Garageband to Logic and iMovie to Final Cut progression

Photos isn't even close to the genuine Lightroom competitor that Aperture was

UqWBcuFx6NV4r25 days ago

Not only that, but Photos has gotten less and less capable over time.

nxobject25 days ago

When you're not plowing money into putting AI everywhere, it's easier to be cheaper than Adobe I guess...

(For what it's worth, the iWorks apps – Pages/Keynote/Numbers are free and bundled with macOS.)

JeremyJaydan25 days ago

I've had "buy motion" on my todo list for a while now.. just wanted to learn something new but it never made sense to buy it. With the subscription I think I'll give it a shot. Awesome!

samgranieri25 days ago

I wondered when Apple was going to do this. Seemed inevitable when Final Cut Pro on the iPad had a subscription, I think.

I hope I can still use the non subscription version of Pixelmator pro I bought

bob102925 days ago

> Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Keynote, Pages, Numbers

https://i.imgflip.com/2siu6l.jpg

aosaigh25 days ago

It’s odd not to see Photomator in this bundle. Feels even more likely that they’re going to kill it off in place of the regular Photos app.

WillAdams25 days ago

Is anyone finding Freeform useful?

I tried it out when it was first announced and found it painfully limited --- did I miss something? Has it gotten better?

jonpurdy25 days ago

I find it useful as a massive canvas for keeping a bunch of stuff in context, visually. And accessible via Mac and iPhone. But it is sorely lacking a major feature: highlight text to add a hyperlink. I end up with full URLs instead of hyperlinked words and it's pretty messy.

thadk24 days ago

The main thing about Freeform that has been useful is that it has been a https://infinitecanvas.tools without a lock-in subscription.

Toutouxc25 days ago

I use it regularly to do rough sketches of objects on my iPad to model in CAD later on the computer. It doesn't feel right for artwork or notes or basically anything else.

andsoitis25 days ago

Innovation!

More seriously, the subscription probably comes out cheaper than buying several (even if not all) of the apps that come in the bundle.

lysace25 days ago

Yeah! They were courageous enough to take the step that Microsoft did with the Office suite (announced 1988, launched 1990) and with Microsoft 365 as subscription in 2011.

EagnaIonat25 days ago

Are they planning to discontinue Garage band?

felineflock25 days ago

That Synth Player and Chord ID seem to be killer features on Logic Pro. Are they recent additions? Do they work well?

steve197725 days ago

It's not released yet.

rado25 days ago

Pixelmator Pro is fantastic. I've forgotten about Photoshop for many years. Just buy it.

felixding25 days ago

The icons...so this is what the future looks like under Steve Lemay?!

opengrass25 days ago

Cool, just don't send me your project files in email attachments.

nipperkinfeet25 days ago

All these companies can go to hell with their subscription traps.

tjpnz25 days ago

Pages, Numbers and Keynote are the first apps I bin whenever I'm setting up a new Mac. Would people actually pay money for them?

pico30325 days ago

Keynote is so much better for presentations that PowerPoint it's not even funny. But if you're not doing presentations, I can understand dumping it. I do like to have Pages because it means I don't have to bother with Word's annoying ribbon interface and Copilot AI when I'm writing...though sounds like that may be changing?

quitit25 days ago

Keynote is completely underrated, likely because people assume it's just a Powerpoint clone, but it's more like a highly templated motion graphics app with a UI that steers people into using it as Powerpoint replacement.

So not only is it a far quicker way to make a PPT than using Powerpoint. I also see it used for making presentation videos, interactive PDFs and even animated GIFs/HTML5 animations.

The number of motion graphics marketing videos I see which are actually just Keynote files exported to video is impressive.

pico30325 days ago

That’s kind of funny you mention “quicker way to make a PPT.” Everyone at my company had been asking me how I make my presentations look so good. I’m no designer; I’m a lowly engineer. But I do them in Keynote and export them to PowerPoint, which is half the battle!

(Sadly, my work laptop is Windows. So I create them on my personal laptop then migrate to PPT and do my best to fix up the fonts on Windows.)

piersroberts25 days ago

I'd forgotten Pages and Numbers existed, but Keynote is worth paying for if it means that I don't have to use PowerPoint.

void-pointer25 days ago

Numbers is brilliant simply because of independent freely-movable tables

It looks so much better than the grid enforced by Excel.

bromuro25 days ago

Yeah Numbers wins, when going back to Excel I miss it. It’s not as powerful though.

data-ottawa25 days ago

I put up with Numbers awful pivot table mechanics (why do they have to be manually updated?) because it genuinely allows you to create nice information displays with your tables.

I have a numbers file for my personal finances and it is so nice having some tables at the top with mortgage info and then details below. It makes running what-ifs super easy. Charts in excel and GSheets just kinda float over your content awkwardly.

embedding-shape25 days ago

> Would people actually pay money for them?

Why would someone need to buy them, they only run on macOS and macOS hardware comes with it by default, doesn't it?

insane_dreamer25 days ago

I absolutely would. I've used them for years, alongside MS Office on Windows and Libre Office on Linux, and while they lack a few features they're not ones I've ever needed and the UI and ease of use is far superior to Office. Especially Pages is a pleasure to work with compared with Word.

nottorp25 days ago

I use Pages once a month for an invoice :)

Not sure why tbh, my other invoices are done in LibreOffice.

PlunderBunny25 days ago

I paid for Numbers way back when it was a paid app. I have simple needs, and I much preferred the smooth inertial scrolling compared to running Excel in a VM (which was what I was doing before).

troupo25 days ago

They want you to pay money for premium AI features in those apps, which is worse.

The apps themselves are fine IMO.

karmakaze25 days ago

OT: ...protecting their privacy. LOL (wrong playbook triggered writing this)

> [...] to make Apple Creator Studio an exciting subscription suite to empower creators of all disciplines while protecting their privacy.

brcmthrowaway25 days ago

Does anyone use these apps?

moolcool25 days ago

How long until the option to buy-once for this software goes away? I am not a fan of this trend.

rvz25 days ago

You will (soon) own nothing and be happy.

cupofjoakim25 days ago

That's great if you need everything. If you need one of them, not so much.

bayindirh25 days ago

You can buy the individual tools, if you want.

al_borland25 days ago

I'm curious how many people actually use all this stuff themselves. It seems like an extreme niche, and more often than not will have people paying for apps they will never use.

d_runs_far25 days ago

Maybe I'm old skool... but for the last 30+ years I've been using a combination of photoshop, illustrator, FCP, after effects (back when it was CoSA...), some audio editing and mixing in quite a bit of code as well. While others on my team specialize in one or two domains, I've managed to keep my skills in many.

Back in the day I was considered a 'MultiMedia' creative. I don't even know what to call myself these days.

cush25 days ago

That’s a great deal

bluesounddirect25 days ago

So can i use this to purge the liquid metal from MacOS 26 ?

gilgoomesh25 days ago

You got Liquid Metal? I'm stuck with Liquid Glass :-(

bluesounddirect23 days ago

liquid metal / glass whats the difference its all shiny and amorphous.

NoSalt25 days ago

> "come together in a single SUBSCRIPTION"

Ummm ... no, thank you.

miguel-muniz24 days ago

Multiple thoughts on this:

1.0 Creating a software bundle is the expected play by a company that keeps trying to grow their subscription revenue, but lots of creators are fed up paying an arm and a leg for software they'll never own that they need to do their job. Canva turned a lot of heads and got new people into Affinity just by making it free, I would have liked to see Apple lead with the same pitch rather than make just another bundle.

2.0 I feel like this is a u-turn on what made buying Apple hardware so great. You paid a pretty penny for the hardware but you would get high quality software with more care and attention paid to it than their competitors. This has changed in recent years, with many of the iWork products languishing with only minor updates as the market has evolved towards simplified cloud-based tools. Although there's still free functionality and the subscription provides a more affordable way to get into their pro tools, I fear the free versions will become second-class.

2.1 The same has happened to their stance on advertising as well, with the App Store getting ads and Maps being next in line to get them too. Microsoft and Google are still much worse than Apple in this regard, but I thought they would hold out for much longer than cave to growing pressures to grow revenue.

3.0 I'm not a fan of putting generative AI as a selling point in a product called "creator studio". Many artists are against the usage for various reasons, and Apple has a long history of aligning themselves with creative individuals. Seems like a misunderstanding of what their audience would want.

4.0 No Garageband or iMovie feels like they've abandoned them. Which is a shame for tools that have started so many creator's careers. There's still a need for simplified tools for creators early in their careers or with simpler needs, something that CapCut has shown.

5.0 There's still gaps in their bundle. There's no software for UI design. I could see Apple acquiring Sketch, they would just need to reach feature parity with Figma. There's lots of organizations getting squeezed by Figma's enterprise contracts, and most product designers I know are already on Macs. There's also no drawing or animation software. I could see them acquiring the team behind Procreate and Procreate Dreams to fill it. That software already sells iPads, many artists have gotten their start with digital art with it. Another gap is publishing, although they could probably add functionality to Pages or buy Swift Publisher.

6.0 Who is this for? Every organization under the sun already pays for Office 365, and I've never known a designer who's used Pixelmator for their day to day work. Affinity felt like a much more compelling alternative to Adobe, and anyone with simple enough needs to use these tools is probably already using web-based tools on their Windows laptop. I suppose hobbyists, but I'm not sure if a subscription is compelling for them.

seec24 days ago

Agreed.

I feel like if you were to be content with those tools, you wouldn't really want to pay for them. I guess the argument is getting access to Final Cut and Logic for cheap, but there are pro software of the same quality accessible for free or close to it (usually people get starter DAW licenses from buying hardware, and DaVinci has free stuff).

Apple is losing the plot on so many levels. If they want to make their stuff subscription, they really need to make it much better than it is at the moment.

imagetic25 days ago

Bad move Apple. Bad move.

wildredkraut25 days ago

lol, what a money grab.

cramcgrab25 days ago

[dead]

bobse25 days ago

[dead]

MaxGL25 days ago

[dead]

MaxGL25 days ago

[dead]

throwaway8582525 days ago

Another subscription slop?

user393938225 days ago

Fuck Apple I’m done with all their rent seeking and shit lock-in. Broken CLI tools. Hello Asahi Linux and x64 FreeBSD.

Fraaaank25 days ago

Alternative title: "Apple slaps subscription model on existing apps"

jen2025 days ago

Except that isn’t an alternative title, unless you want to lie by omission thus being wrong.

“Apple offers new option for subscription in addition to existing one-time purchase optinos” might be an alternative though, and reduce the number of cynically inane comments from people that apparently didn’t RTFA before commenting.

isoprophlex25 days ago

God fucking damn not you too, Apple. Adobe isn't a role model to emulate. I hate Adobe's practices. The whole world hates Adobe's practices. I want to pay for a thing with my money and then use it without worrying about ongoing costs, the UI changing, features breaking, or shit being shoved down my throat because some seedy PM wants a raise.

EDIT: I know you can still buy the software... but for how long?

joshstrange25 days ago

RTFA, you can still buy them for a one-time purchase on the App Store

moolcool25 days ago

For now...

spott25 days ago

You can. They are offering both options.

xd193625 days ago

Is this replacing the one-time purchase of these apps on macOS?

shmoogy25 days ago

Doesn't sound like it > Alternatively, users can also choose to purchase the Mac versions of Final Cut Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Logic Pro, Motion, Compressor, and MainStage individually as a one-time purchase on the Mac App Store.5

artimaeis25 days ago

No, fta:

> Alternatively, users can also choose to purchase the Mac versions of Final Cut Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Logic Pro, Motion, Compressor, and MainStage individually as a one-time purchase on the Mac App Store.

sirwhinesalot25 days ago

And here's the ruining of Pixelmator Pro everyone was waiting for. I paid one time 20 euros for it (discounted). And I would gladly pay again even full price for a new major version.

I don't want yet another subscription.

I see that they can still be bought (for now) but I wonder how long that will last.

bayindirh25 days ago

Pixelmator Pro is upgraded a couple of times under Apple's wings, and this thing is not being ruined.

You'll still be able to buy it if you want. All apps are still can be bought. It's in the text.

Apple surprised me nicely there.

joshstrange25 days ago

One-time purchase versions are still available. For Pixelmator Pro it's $49.99 on the App Store

dsego25 days ago

That's not very reassuring.

sirwhinesalot25 days ago

For now.

noodlesUK25 days ago

I think this is a huge mistake at least as far as the office software goes. One of the key advantages to Pages.app and friends is that they are pre-installed and free on MacOS. This will just drive people to M365 and Google Docs.

zffr25 days ago

Pages and other iWork apps will remain free. The premium features are for curated images and templates, and AI assisted document creation. If you don't care for those features, you will not be affected by the change.

dagmx25 days ago

Good thing they remain free and pre installed. As per the article.