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A negative about CC frequent updates
Much has been made of the fact that Adobe can now update and upgrade as frequently as they like, thanks to the subscription nature of CC. Yearly upgrades, from this point of view, were merely a burden necessitated by various stock reporting rules and regulations. Having now taken the jump to CC I would like to suggest that this advantage does not come without cost – and in this case the cost is documentation and order.
The yearly regimen of software upgrades allowed for a regularly scheduled upgrade to manuals and documentation. I was once married to a technical writer and I know the time pressure they used to be under to update documentation for those yearly upgrades. Now with CC this is gone, at least at Adobe, as there is NO real documentation to update. FCP 6 came with 2200 pages of documentation spread over 5 volumes. Currently PPro comes with a PDF that’s 500 pages long with an additional 50 pages of update notes. The PDF is filled with links to video tutorials that may or may not be helpful, but nowhere is there an index to all features so now if you want to understand what every option in a given menu box does you are left to trial and error. Every new upgrade compounds the problems for a new user who doesn’t know if a feature is to be found in the main document or in one of the update appendices.
I tried Premiere back when it first became Pro and at that point it seemed like a streamlined version of FCP, without the multiplicity of menus and crazy disorganization that was one of Final Cut’s bigger problems for novice users. However at this point PPro has truly become FCP’s successor; menu’s everywhere, organization nowhere.
Yes, it’s nice to add new features whenever they are developed, but unless some discipline is added in, what you get is chaos. There is something to be said for a slower but more orderly development cycle.
Herb Sevush
Zebra Productions
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nothin’ attached to nothin’
“Deciding the spine is the process of editing” F. Bieberkopf