Adobe's design programs certainly aren't the only ones important to Macs. There are also Quark's QuarkXpress and a number of Web-oriented design applications from Macromedia, such as Dreamweaver, Flash, Fireworks or Shockwave. Other products, such as Bare Bones Software's BBEdit, have carved out important niches, particularly on OS X. But Quark and Macromedia have also been slow to issue OS X versions of their applications, though this fall the latter released Freehand 10 for the new operating system. Much could change at the next Macworld Expo trade show in January, where developers are expected to announce a slew of new design products. "In the graphic design, pre-press and desktop publishing industry, there is a triad of applications that power those businesses: Adobe Photoshop, (Adobe) Illustrator and QuarkXPress. The release of X versions of those apps endorses Apple's work" on OS X, said Adam Masri, a Mac systems integrator in San Francisco. On the design front, Apple's biggest Mac OS X supporter to date is Ottawa, Canada-based Corel. The company has been churning out new OS X applications at a rapid pace, looking to fill the void left by larger Mac developers. Under its new Procreate brand, Corel this fall unleashed OS X versions of Painter 7, KnockOut 2 and KPT Effects, a collection of plug-ins for photo editing and design. Corel also released Graphics Suite 10, which includes the CorelDraw page-layout and design application and Photo-Paint for editing and retouching images. Adobe's upcoming Mac OS X products will warm what looked like a chilly relationship with Apple earlier in the year. Adobe, for example, skipped Apple's Macworld trade show in July in New York. Apple showcases new products at the trade shows, which are must-attend events for Mac software and hardware developers. Adobe does plan to attend Macworld in San Francisco next month. "Adobe hasn't exactly been Apple's poster child for OS X," said Technology Business Research analyst Tim Deal. "Certainly applications from Adobe, Microsoft and other major Mac developers are vital to Mac OS X's adoption." But Adobe's initial tacit support for OS X is turning vocal. Adobe's "Windows business has been growing", Chizen said. "But from a creative, professional perspective, the true creative professional or designer is still predominately Macintosh." Chizen emphasised that next year "the adoption of OS X is going to happen. All of our key design products, like Illustrator, InDesign, LiveMotion and, of course, Photoshop are going OS X." This fall, Adobe released its first OS X applications, namely Illustrator 10 and After Effects 5.5. The company also has circulated beta, or test, OS X versions of its InDesign page-layout application and GoLive, which is used for Web-page design. Both products are expected to ship as early as January. Reviving professional sales
Apple certainly needs help with sales of professional systems--PowerBook G4 notebooks and Power Mac G4 desktops--which slumped during the company's fiscal fourth quarter that ended in September. Power Mac sales dropped 34 percent in units compared with the same period a year earlier, although sales rose 10 percent from the previous quarter. PowerBooks took a stiffer hit, with sales down 34 percent year-over-year and down 46 percent from the previous quarter. Apple sells the bulk of Power Macs and PowerBooks to so-called creative professionals, such as those doing page layout and design, photo editing and movie production. To help boost professional portables sales, Apple revved up the PowerBook in October, with faster processors and other system enhancements. On Monday, the company made combo CD-rewritable/DVD drives standard on PowerBook. It is possible that the company will release faster Power Macs during Macworld in San Francisco next month. The Power Mac G4 tops out at 867MHz, but new models could push well beyond 1GHz. Still, computers and operating systems don't sell without applications. There, even Apple has shown caution. Although the company has shipped OS X on new Macs since May, the older Mac OS 9.2.2 is still the primary operating system and the one that loads first. Masri believes there is pent up demand for new Macs that won't be released until more OS X applications reach the market, particularly for professional systems. "Graphics industry professionals don't use those apps in a vacuum," he said. "Each application has a vibrant plug-in market that makes them more powerful, and those developers need release-quality software to build on. So, I see X versions of these apps as an enabler for this entire industry." Fight or switch?
Even as Adobe puts its full development muscle behind OS X, the company faces a quandary about expanding into a new market: DVD authoring and production. Earlier this month, Adobe cut a licensing deal with Sonic Solutions, for using the company's DVD authoring software in upcoming products. But in the Mac market, such a move could put Adobe on a collision course with Apple. Apple started shipping Power Macs with DVD recording drives early this year. The company also offers two DVD authoring packages: iDVD 2 for consumers and its industrial-strength DVD Professional. The latter product is not yet available for OS X. Adobe's chief executive made it clear that DVD will be an important market for the company, particularly given the technology's rapid adoption by consumers. Creative professionals will "be able to edit their video in Premiere, edit their images in Photoshop and be able to create DVDs in a very creative way", Chizen said. But they may not be able to do that on a Mac with an Adobe product. Making a Mac DVD product is "something we're still evaluating", Chizen said. "The challenge on the Mac is that it would be competing against Apple with their DVD Pro solution. If we believe they will have an unfair advantage, then we will probably choose not to compete against them." See the Software News Section for the latest headlines on everything from peer to peer clients to Office software and beyond. Have your say instantly, and see what others have said. Click on the TalkBack button and go to the Telecoms forum. Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom. And read other letters.






