iPad&iPhone user

Why Photoshop on iOS is a huge win for the iPad Pro

It’s a huge shot in the arm for the iPad Pro and another sign of where Apple’s platforms are going in the future, says Jason Snell

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So it’s official. Photoshop – real Photoshop – is coming to the iPad next year. If you’re someone who uses Photoshop, uses the iPad to get work done, or both, this is big news. It’s a huge shot in the arm for the iPad Pro and another sign of where Apple’s platforms are going in the future. In 2019, iOS apps aren’t just coming to the Mac – one of the biggest and most important Mac apps is coming to iOS.

The power of the familiar

Most of the time when I mention Photoshop around my fellow computer nerds, it’s met with a raised eyebrow. Lots of tech people dislike Adobe’s pioneering of the software subscripti­on route, and there are numerous alternativ­es to Photoshop out there. On the Mac alone, there are excellent apps like Acorn and Pixelmator Pro.

The truth is, Photoshop is huge and it’s entrenched. It’s been used by graphics profession­als for three decades. The workflows of many different fields are based on it. Businesses large, medium, and small rely on it. Adobe makes it really easy to buy seats for a site license, write a check, and equip every computer – Mac or PC – with the industry standard. (Creative Cloud really is to publishing and graphics what Microsoft Office is to business.)

And then there’s the personal factor. I learned how to use Photoshop in my university newspaper offices in 1990 – that means I learned on Photoshop 1.0. The computer I used for Photoshop – a Mac IIcx – didn’t have a colour monitor, just greyscale. (It also didn’t have layers and only had a single level of undo, which meant the moment your ants stopped marching, your changes were irrevocabl­e. It clarified the mind.)

Photoshop is deep, deep in my muscle memory now. I have, on my Mac, a half-dozen apps that offer most or all of the same features that I use in Photoshop. And none of them costs the £19.97 per month I pay for Photoshop. But – and this is my key point here – none of them are Photoshop. Only Photoshop is Photoshop, and I actually appreciate the fact that I can now pay a monthly instalment to Adobe and make sure that

I am always using the latest and greatest version of the app I’ve been using for 28 years.

(By the way, for what it’s worth, Adobe’s photograph­y bundle – Photoshop and Lightroom for £9.98 per month – is a pretty good deal if you like those apps. Every other major Adobe pro app is £19.97 per month, and the full Creative Cloud membership is £49.94 per month.)

Why it matters on iPad

On iOS the same rules apply: While there are lots of apps that do many of the things that Photoshop does, most notably Pixelmator and Affinity Photo, they aren’t Photoshop. (There are even a bunch of ‘Photoshop apps’ from Adobe – but they, too, are weird remixes of Photoshop that aren’t real Photoshop.) For someone like me, that makes a huge difference.

But it’s not just me. A comics artist I like a lot, Jen Bartel, tweeted a while ago about how much she loves her iPad – but can’t use it to do her job. Her business speaks the language of Photoshop and she has come to rely on custom brushes that are owned by Adobe and only available in Photoshop. To do profession­al work on the go, Bartel – a Mac user and iPad fan – uses a Windows-driven Wacom MobileStud­io Pro device because it runs Photoshop.

Adobe’s move to iPad instantly makes everyone who knows, loves, or relies on Photoshop a possible candidate for an iPad Pro. And make no mistake, the iPad Pro is already plenty powerful enough to run

Photoshop, and with the Apple Pencil it’s got an input method that will satisfy most graphics pros. Even better, Adobe has said that it will be building in cloud syncing for Photoshop files, so that you’ll be able to seamlessly hand off projects directly from one device to another.

A lot of the criticism of the iPad Pro as a flawed tool for doing real work comes down to software. The hardware is capable – but where’s the software? These arguments have been weak for a while now – I think Microsoft Office for iPad is great, and Apple’s iWork apps are remarkably capable, too – but with every major app that arrives on the platform, the quieter that criticism has to get. Adobe is also bringing a simplified version of Premiere, called Premiere Rush, to the iPad. I wonder if Apple’s considerin­g just how Final Cut and Logic might work on the iPad?

It flows both ways

In 2019, things are going to change. Yes, we know that Apple is working on a way for iOS apps to come to the Mac. But as Adobe’s announceme­nt indicates, desktop apps are going to iOS, too. When Adobe discusses Photoshop now, it does so as a single tool that appears on the various devices used by the people who rely on it. Photoshop is a system that spans Mac, PC, and now iOS. It goes where you go, on the devices you want.

Apple is heading there, too, with its initiative to create a common framework that can be used to build Mac and iOS apps. And it’s hard not to look at the appearance of Apple’s Phil Schiller at Adobe Max as a clear indicator that Adobe’s moves will be a big part of Apple’s messaging around the iPad Pro in the next year.

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 ??  ?? The Apple Pencil is perfectly suited for Photoshop on the iPad
The Apple Pencil is perfectly suited for Photoshop on the iPad
 ??  ?? Photoshop for iPad is near to the desktop release
Photoshop for iPad is near to the desktop release

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