Adobe Systems, taking the same course with its forthcoming
Creative Suite applications, will offer the next
Mac OS X version of Photoshop Lightroom only on Intel-based machines.
Apple has chosen to discontinue support for Macs using PowerPC processors beginning with its next operating system, version 10.6 a.k.a. Snow Leopard, which is due to arrive in coming weeks. Adobe said last week that
its next Creative Suite will follow suit. The CS family includes programs such as Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, DreamWeaver, and Flash Professional.
Lightroom, which is for editing and cataloging photos, isn't part of the suite, but it's headed the same route.
"The next full version update of Lightroom will not run on PowerPC-based Mac computers," Lightroom product manager Tom Hogarty said in a
blog post last week. "Lightroom 2 updates will continue to support PowerPC."
Meanwhile, Photoshop Principal Product Manager John Nack, while
fond of PowerPC, took a pragmatic tone on his
blog: "By the time the next version of the (Creative) Suite ships, the very youngest PPC-based Macs will be roughly four-years-old. They're still great systems, but if you haven't upgraded your workstation in four years, you're probably not in a rush to upgrade your software, either."
Via
CNET
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