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Apple No Show
I am starting to feel the echoes of what happened in the demise of edit* with the Discreet’s (Autodesk) “corporate” decision. I believe the original arrival of a much cheaper FCP editing product that could handle HD content, hastened the demise of edit*, which was a very good, solid editing program, but was the poor stepchild to Autodesk’s Autocad and 3D animation products, as far as marketshare and income. Edit* also didn’t carry quite the exorbitant price tag of the Inferno, Flame, Smoke solutions either. Autodesk decided to kill a great editing program and leave the NLE field to its cheaper rivals. I think Ron is the one who predicted not too long ago, albeit with a wink, and very “tongue in cheek,” that Apple may indeed be flipping off its post market, and is ripe for a sell-off of FCP. It has been very obvious with the last few Quicktime upgrades (and the bizarrely named “ProKit” upgrade), that Apple really doesn’t care about how it inconveniences its professional customers. It was like the early days, doing post work on the Windows NT and Windows XP (SP1)platforms. u>Every little incremental upgrade severely crippled a lot of third party software programs and plug-ins, and the pro market had to upgrade with patches and new drivers constantly. The recent QT upgrades were definitely only “security upgrades” shuttled out quickly so Apple could have the consumer masses be able to download Hollywood content on all their I-Junk devices. “Oh, you mean that this QT/OS incremental upgrade breaks rendering in After Effects, and also cripples compressor, FCP, and third party drivers and software?? So sad, too bad…”
I think I kind of share Walter’s hope that they do sell FCP to Avid or Adobe, and have the program become cross-platform with real development and integration, like the current direction Adobe is going with their production suite. This no show at NAB will also allow Adobe to shine even brighter this April.