I really wonder what finally made Apple decide to build and ship iPad versions of these apps. I said beyond the obvious one! I honestly don’t know, though it’s clear from what I’ve seen that Apple has put an enormous amount of effort into both of these apps. (For the rest, May 23 is two short weeks away.) Fortunately, I’ve got answers to some-but definitely not all-of them. And beyond the obvious “what took them so long,” I had a lot of questions about both of these apps. Apple announced on Tuesday that Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro are coming to the iPad starting May 23. When Apple released the M2 iPad Pro last fall, it was able to boast about video performance-but only by trumpeting the third-party app DaVinci Resolve, since Apple’s own video editing software still wasn’t available on the platform. “At least Adobe is investing in the future of the iPad Pro-something we’ve yet to see from Apple’s own pro software team, which still hasn’t offered versions of Logic Pro and Final Cut Pro for the iPad,” I wrote back in 2018, still lamenting the situation, as I did once again in 2021. But in the intervening seven and a half years, it’s felt that the iPad’s hardware has constantly been let down by its software-and Apple’s failure to support its own pro iPad hardware with its pro-level apps was a perfect example of the problem. Final Cut and Logic arrive on iPad: Questions and (some) answersīack in November 2015, Apple released the first iPad Pro, and I was hooked.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |