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andsoitistoday at 2:15 PM9 repliesview on HN

> 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?


Replies

bayindirhtoday at 2:23 PM

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.

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boringgtoday at 2:18 PM

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.

mirzaptoday at 2:28 PM

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

acomjeantoday at 2:24 PM

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..

jpalomakitoday at 2:22 PM

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

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Someonetoday at 2:26 PM

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.”

tapoxitoday at 2:24 PM

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

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F7F7F7today at 2:40 PM

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

pjmlptoday at 2:23 PM

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.