34 comments

  • Tanoc 37 minutes ago

    I bought CS6 Suite back in 2012 and used it well into 2021. Before that I had a patchwork of CS3 programs from 2005 I was given the discs for second-hand. Nowadays I use Krita, ffmpeg, Blender, Zim Desktop Wiki, and Inkscape to replace Flash/Animator, Photoshop, Premier, Dreamweaver, and Fireworks. CS6 cost me $549 back in 2012 under a pretty generous student discount, but would've been $1,800 otherwise. That's $790 and $2,500 adjusted for inflation if you still trust the BLS' CPI calculations.

    If you buy Adobe CC Pro's all-in-one bundle you get one year at a time to use it, for almost the same price as it cost me to use CS6 Suite for nine. You can't even get secondhand instances of the software like I did as a youth with CS3. The only way to get that nowadays is through piracy, which predisposes users to piracy anyways because the pirates actually disable Adobe's broken cloud features that hinder your work. Meanwhile Blender, ffmpeg, Krita, ZIM, and Inkscape are all free but which I support with donations.

    We all saw this coming back in 2015 when CC first came out. It's just that the revolt was expected to happen sooner.

  • CWuestefeld 30 minutes ago

    We all love to hate on Adobe. But as a photographer my primary software tool is Lightroom. And I continue to use it despite its $120/year price and less-than-stellar cataloging subsystem because its photo editing features (it's primary mission) still exceed the capabilities of its competitors.

    I don't see anyone else here talking about the huge strides that Adobe has taken in the past few years with their masking tools in particular. Adobe is still the leader at least in this segment because their tools are still the leaders functionally.

    If competitors want to leapfrog Adobe, they're going to have to continue to innovate past Adobe in functionality, not just price. After all, that price isn't really that onerous: their photographer's suite (Lightroom and Photoshop) are together only $120 year. That's not free, but it's not so much that I'm willing to make my job as a photographer harder or less effective because of it.

    • righthand 17 minutes ago

      You’ll never try a different product anyways so who cares about Adobe die hards? This might as well be a thread about using Linux and all the Apple die hards come here to tell us they just can’t use anything besides Apple for “reasons”. Great! Enjoy your setup.

      • vladvasiliu 2 minutes ago

        Not GP, but as a LR user, I actually did try alternatives and wasn't impressed. They're usually just as expensive, except if you expect to use the software for multiple years without upgrading, which, to GP's point, would have had you miss out on quite substantial improvements.

        I'm a hobbyist, and the new "AI" masking has saved me a lot of time during my edits. Is it as good as a professional path tool wielder? Probably not, but that's not relevant to my use case.

  • bensyverson an hour ago

    For a long time, "pro" software was able to retain its price premium, even while consumer apps essentially all became free.

    But two things are happening: First, competitors are realizing pro software can be a "loss leader" for a different offer (see: Blackmagic Resolve, Canva's Affinity suite).

    Second, AI is making it possible to create open source alternatives that are very full-featured. Blender is a pre-AI example, but we're seeing an explosion of brand-new high-polish OSS apps this year.

    I'm not moving away from Lightroom yet, because I have a massive catalog containing 20+ years of photos. But new users coming into the ecosystem have far more options now. It's a tough time to charge a subscription for something that's getting actively commoditized.

    • Calavar 35 minutes ago

      > we're seeing an explosion of brand-new high-polish OSS apps this year

      Do you mind sharing a few examples?

      • armadyl 7 minutes ago

        None exist, it's literally all slop.

    • jauntywundrkind 2 minutes ago

      Ran into rapidraw yesterday looking for rust RAW processing (was looking for libraries or CLI tools but taking inventory as I went). Ran into rapidraw, which notably is GPU accelerated: https://github.com/cybertimon/rapidraw#rapidraw

      The recent updates list is so impressive. Good steady stream of updates. And a good number of them take and integrate amazing incredible open source models, doing one shot depth processing, doing other object detections.

      And oh by the way the developer is 18 years old.

    • rpastuszak 41 minutes ago

      FWIW it took me waaaaay less time to import 30k+ photos from a Lightroom catalog to Capture one than into a fresh Lightroom install.

      Granted it was a few years back, but we’re talking about minutes vs hours.

    • vrighter an hour ago

      don't offend blender by comparing it to ai slop.

  • nehal3m an hour ago

    http://archive.today/WCDgq

    It’s so insidious to sell yearly subscriptions that you pay for monthly. I want to pay by the month precisely because I decide on a monthly basis whether I need a service. If you want out early with Adobe you have to cough up half of the remaining subscription time.

    For hobby photography do yourself a favor and skip this dark pattern peddler. I’ll pour one out for the pro’s.

    • vladvasiliu 7 minutes ago

      > For hobby photography do yourself a favor and skip this dark pattern peddler.

      Meh. It depends on how you view your photography.

      I'm a Sunday photographer. Never made a dime from my work, and I don't look to. I just do it because I enjoy it. I particularly enjoy that I can use it as an excuse to move my ass away from my computer, walk around town to grab shots, etc.

      I like editing my photos, but the editing is not why I take photos. I don't want to spend a ridiculous amount of time to learn a new tool. It's a hobby, and the software is only an accessory to it. If I have to spend hours to learn a new tool in front of my computer, it defeats the purpose.

      I tried Darktable, and got okish results with it, but it's a pain to use. It doesn't have any serious noise reduction, and since I can't be bothered to lug around anything heavier than a m4/3 body with an f/4 lense, it's something I need, because I mainly shoot at night half the year.

      I've looked at alternatives like capture one, but unless you intend to not upgrade your software for at least 3-4 years, they're not cheaper, even though they're not subscription based. You also have to cough up all the money upfront. And you get no Photoshop, either, which I use in addition to LR.

      Now, I don't love lightroom. I have no idea wtf it lags when I open and close panels on a pretty hefty desktop. But boy, do I love the time I gain with "ai" masking, noise reduction and object removal.

      All in all, it's just not expensive enough to make it worth my while to change to a different software and also lose all my catalog history, just to cough up the same amount of cash in the end.

      Now, if someone came up with an actual equivalent that ran on Linux, so I didn't have to have a dedicated Windows box just for this, I'd line right up with my money ready.

  • chromacity 25 minutes ago

    Every time I see one of these HN threads, I am actually amazed with what Adobe was able to pull off. I'm not surprised that they could do the bait-and-switch of having pros used to their tools and then forcing them to move to a subscription model. In fact, for some businesses, a subscription may have some benefits. You were probably upgrading regularly anyway, and the only downside is that it's an expense you can't cut back on in a lean year.

    But there are so many hobbyists, including here HN, who just went with it and have given Adobe thousands of dollars over the past decade just to keep using Lightroom or Photoshop! It just boggles my mind. There was a brief period where you had no good alternatives - GIMP wasn't it - but for almost all hobby needs, you now have very good pay-once alternatives (e.g., Capture One instead of Lightroom). It's basically a monthly fee you pay for not having to think about the problem, and people are willing to pay it for many years.

    Makes me think I should be doing more bait-and-switch...

    • teamonkey 6 minutes ago

      I don’t think it’s that surprising. People will pay for software that has better usability and better functionality.

    • j45 12 minutes ago

      Hobbyists and professionals have discovered tools like Affinity. Well, the non-subscription version of it anyways.'

  • int32_64 5 minutes ago

    Are there any projects focused on getting 'creative' software to work well on Linux? Valve solved Linux gaming but it seems tools like DAWs and video/photo editing is still terrible on Linux.

  • diath an hour ago

    If you're a hobbyist needing photo editing software, just use https://www.photopea.com/

    • Wistar 8 minutes ago

      Photopea is very good. It is what I recommend to friends who just want an immediate solution.

  • QuantumSeed an hour ago

    So many competitors are releasing free or low-cost alternatives, that shifting away from Adobe is becoming plausible for many folks.

  • classified an hour ago

    What took them so long? It's about time.

  • bix6 an hour ago

    Paywall.

    I assume everyone is tired of their subscription fee?

    I love Lightroom but it’s too expensive for my hobby use. I wish all the photo systems had better interoperability. I’m losing quite a bit as I migrate to Darktable.

    • alsetmusic an hour ago

      Paywall at the Verge? I have them in my RSS feeds and load articles most days and have never seen that. I definitely don't subscribe to their site. Either way, here's a link:

      https://archive.is/WCDgq

      • fluidcruft an hour ago

        Yeah, theverge is subscription now.

      • Mixtape an hour ago

        Their articles seem to load fine in my reader (Fluent) if I fetch them as they're published. Beyond that though, if I try to fetch the full content or open the article in my browser, I hit the paywall. It seems like either their paywall takes a few minutes to apply to their new articles or they deliberately make them accessible to RSS users fee-free.

        • j45 12 minutes ago

          It's a good thing to reward RSS use.

    • corndoge an hour ago

      Try DxO Photolab if you have a mac

      • bix6 an hour ago

        Better than Darktable?

      • j45 11 minutes ago

        acdsee is another one worth exploring.

        • Wistar 4 minutes ago

          acdsee, at least a few years ago when I was using it for large volume jpg commercial work, is fast and often good enough. The trickier stuff went for a spin in Photoshop.

        • ArekDymalski 6 minutes ago

          now , that's a name I haven't heard in... decades.

    • tayo42 an hour ago

      All of the software is to expensive for hobbyists.

      How do people make the jump from hobby to pro without going broke paying for all of this software on their own? Is the art industry alittle more leniant about learning software on the job?

      • Tanoc 29 minutes ago

        Most of us start off as pirates and then go legitimate once we're big enough to work with others. Everybody knows someone who has a cracked version of some ancient version of Corel Draw, but we all know getting contracted under a big company means they want us using the latest file type standards because they'll only have access to the newest version of the file's publishing program. I know some people who still animate in Flash MX and go through all of the trouble of porting it forward to Animator CC 2025. Thought with Adobe killing Animator last month maybe they'll end up with some even more convoluted upconversion chain to get it into Toonboom.

      • egypturnash 21 minutes ago

        Student discounts, piracy. Mostly piracy.

  • varispeed an hour ago

    They keep adding bloat instead of focusing on usability. Still can't get Illustrator to remember my print settings.