Goodbye Adobe Creative Cloud...

FowlersFreeTime

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Finally pulled the plug on Adobe's scam of a subscription service. So much money wasted I don't want to think about it.
Currently using Capture One Express for photos, and have nothing for video editing.
Wondering if Adobe will get any of my money for their Photoshop and Premiere Elements software, but now seems like a good time to make a clean break from Adobe altogether.
Thoughts?
 
I have always avoided Adobe because of the recurrent/subscription costs... ...only to end up subscribing to CaptureOne because with perpetual licence I would end up having none of my cameras supported or the accumulated cost of upgrades would be higher than that of the subscription.
 
I stopped using Adobe many years ago. I use ON1 for image editing. It does the job and is a lot cheaper than Photoshop.
 
Finally pulled the plug on Adobe's scam of a subscription service. So much money wasted I don't want to think about it.
Currently using Capture One Express for photos, and have nothing for video editing.
Wondering if Adobe will get any of my money for their Photoshop and Premiere Elements software, but now seems like a good time to make a clean break from Adobe altogether.
Thoughts?
What ever makes you happy. I have always despised subscription software but now days, it's becoming the norm. The Creative Cloud was the first subscription I bought and I am exceedingly happy with it. The quality is great, I can call Adobe in the middle of the night for help and there is a boat load of help on YouTube, all for less than the price of 2 gallons of gas!
 
Bring back Apple Aperture :(
 
What ever makes you happy. I have always despised subscription software but now days, it's becoming the norm. The Creative Cloud was the first subscription I bought and I am exceedingly happy with it. The quality is great, I can call Adobe in the middle of the night for help and there is a boat load of help on YouTube, all for less than the price of 2 gallons of gas!
My problem was that if I just wanted lightroom, no problem, not expensive. If I wanted light room and photoshop, still not bad. Oh I want Premiere pro as well? might as well just pay for the whole enchilada. I felt like none of their plans made sense for me.
 
My problem was that if I just wanted lightroom, no problem, not expensive. If I wanted light room and photoshop, still not bad. Oh I want Premiere pro as well? might as well just pay for the whole enchilada. I felt like none of their plans made sense for me.
I understand Premiere Pro is very good. Started video work before still photography because I'm a Drone Pilot. I purchased a stand alone copy of Cyberlink Power Director 18 for $130. It does the jog nicely but my real interest is not still photography with my A7 III. It was a long time before I even tried the video capability of the Sony.
 
I've been using Darktable for quite a while. Free, open source, incredibly powerful, plenty of support. There's a bit of a learning curve, but it's an extraordinary free program. It is updated once a year, although the last two years they've updated twice.

What doesn't it do? It doesn't do much in the way of editing, it's a processing program first. I recently purchased Affinity Photo for editing purposes. Of course it will process RAW as well, but I have Darktable down to several clicks and done. I would usually then save as a jpeg for posting or printing. If I want to do some editing, which is rare but happens occasionally (like maybe adding snow to a Christmas card), I will save as a TIF and open in Affinity.

Affinity is inexpensive ($54.00 US) and I am told that so far, every new release has been provided free to purchasers. People tell me they've never spent another penny. Unlike Luminar who consistently misrepresents their products and intentions to their customers. I almost bit once, a little research saved me from that nightmare.
 
Unlike Luminar who consistently misrepresents their products and intentions to their customers. I almost bit once, a little research saved me from that nightmare.
I used Luminar from the start, when it was only available for Macs (!). I didn't like the way they completely redesigned it every year. I gave up when they took away the channel mixer, which I needed for Infrared photography.
 
I find a lot of these apps are great for adjusting images but file management side they lack
 
I find a lot of these apps are great for adjusting images but file management side they lack
I guess that's the biggest indicator that I am not a professional, nor do I have a professional work-flow: I organize my raw files in folders by month and edited jpgs in subfolders, I've never used a photography program to do my file management for me.
 
I find a lot of these apps are great for adjusting images but file management side they lack
Exactly why I like DT, it does NOT try to manage my files for me. I get a sidecar file right next to the RAW and jpeg (if I shot jpeg/Raw). I simply create a 'processed' subfolder in that image folder and save finished images there.

I hated the way Luminar wanted to copy every single image in my pictures folder. When I deleted the free Luminar 3 that I had downloaded to try their workflow, I found it had created SIXTEEEN THOUSAND files on my computer. Screw that. Yeah, I know many were small sidecars, but many others were simply duplicates it made just so it could open them faster, which it didn't anyway. I had been having problems with computer performance. Deleting that nonsense made a huge difference.
 
I used Luminar from the start, when it was only available for Macs (!). I didn't like the way they completely redesigned it every year. I gave up when they took away the channel mixer, which I needed for Infrared photography.
The biggest issues with Luminar is that they advertise themselves as a non-subscription software, buy once and enjoy free updates. Then, they never update but instead issue a 'brand new' version every year to get around the free updates. They also promised a better file management system to customers who complained then backed off and never did. Then, support for the older versions (which tend to be buggy) ceases after 1 year.

Luminar 3 > Luminar IV > Luminar AI > and now a new one, each a year apart. (maybe not 3 to 4) All of these cost Luminar users $, none were free to previous customers. I had purchased two seats for AI when announced, then did some more research and asked for a refund. I got emails from different Lunimar reps asking me to change my mind and stay with them, yet they declined to offer an explanation of their company's behavior when I asked. Nope, sorry, C'Ya!
 
Interesting, but I have never found anything else I like using, or can get the same results from. £120 a year for fully updated software that both my wife and I can use (2 devices) is really not too bad IMO. One off payment software is fine, but it can become obsolete and then you are back to buying it again.
 
Interesting, but I have never found anything else I like using, or can get the same results from. £120 a year for fully updated software that both my wife and I can use (2 devices) is really not too bad IMO. One off payment software is fine, but it can become obsolete and then you are back to buying it again.
We're all animals of habit. I love Darktable and find anything else cumbersome. I'm forcing myself to get used to Affinity for editing. Photoshop used to be my main go-to, but this was way back, before RAW was a thing or I even knew what a lossy file is. I never suggest anyone change unless they ask.
 
I don't know who else cares, but just as an FYI...
The RAW viewer/editor version that you get with Adobe Photoshop Elements is a crippled version of the same Camera Raw plugin you would have at your disposal in Lightroom or Photoshop on Creative Cloud.

I am disappointed, but I think I am more disappointed in myself for not completely letting go of Adobe when I said I would and actually spending money on the Elements software :rolleyes:
 
Finally pulled the plug on Adobe's scam of a subscription service. So much money wasted I don't want to think about it.
Currently using Capture One Express for photos, and have nothing for video editing.
Wondering if Adobe will get any of my money for their Photoshop and Premiere Elements software, but now seems like a good time to make a clean break from Adobe altogether.
Thoughts?
I only need their photography tools, and that subscription is comparatively cheap. I worked it out that it was actually cheaper than buying Photoshop updates every three years (which is what I used to do).

It's a lot cheaper when you don't need the video stuff!
 
I have been very happy with DXO PhotoLab over the past couple of years; just recently updated to PhotoLab 5. The tools are intuitively laid out and I am able to do what I need and want without too much fuss or muss. I particularly like that the program, unlike Lightroom, does not take control of my images by establishing its own "catalog" and such. I can arrange my files and folders in the way that I choose on my computer.
 
I have Lightroom on the downstairs computer on the Windows side which is not working right now. It is the last non-subscription edition. On this box I am mostly Linux which has a lot of free software like GIMP, rawTherapee and so on. That works for me as I do very, very little post processing. I have Darktable also.
 
I have Lightroom on the downstairs computer on the Windows side which is not working right now. It is the last non-subscription edition. On this box I am mostly Linux which has a lot of free software like GIMP, rawTherapee and so on. That works for me as I do very, very little post processing. I have Darktable also.

The only problem with the non-subscription LightRoom is that it hasn't been getting updates for new cameras for a while now, so images from all the new toys can't be read by it.
 
The only problem with the non-subscription LightRoom is that it hasn't been getting updates for new cameras for a while now, so images from all the new toys can't be read by it.

I understand that there are no new profiles. However I downloaded the A7M II profile with the last upgrade along with the lens profiles and I am sure that the old Leicas are in there and the lenses. I have old lenses, non-Leica, and they are common so chances are that they are included. The new Voigtländers, no. It is a moot point anyway. There is an independent fellow who builds new LR lens profiles which can be imported sans Adobe. I edit little, have only recently turned the DNG's back on for the Leicas and I guess I will do it for the A7M III also. I doubt I can outsmart the Sony engineers in what they do when they make a JPG. IIRC there is a Linux JPG editor which mods the file but does not overlay and save the file unless instructed to do so. The effect is that all the changes are in one change which degrades the JPG less. FWIW I see little degradation anyway. Pixel peeping is not my game. Image, composition, color, interest, yes. Counting eyelashes, no. We can't all love the same woman.
 
The only problem with the non-subscription LightRoom is that it hasn't been getting updates for new cameras for a while now, so images from all the new toys can't be read by it.
How convenient for Adobe. Lots of software is going subscription these days and if you use old software for business, it probably has Security issues.
 
How convenient for Adobe. Lots of software is going subscription these days and if you use old software for business, it probably has Security issues.

I do not think of Adobe as evil. New releases of LR could cost money, too. Adobe just went to a different business model along with a lot of software foundries. I am not saying I like this new model. This is just an observation.

I understand caution with software. But if that package were bleeding it would be pretty well known. I see that recently routers have been infected with malware. I checked about updating the firmware in mine. I cannot. Starlink. I guess they handle it on their end. They would not want a massive data breach throughout their network.

FWIW I scan daily on Linux and whenever I am on W10 when I also update whatever needs updating. I also update Linux whenever updates are available. I believe that the most recent software is almost always the most secure. The only virus I have had was on a BLU phone and I had to change connected emails two or three times to be free of that. The phones are useless now. Some evil critter is in there, and will not allow updates. I keep my Nokia up to snuff, too. This is nothing to be taken lightly. Luckily I have pissed all my money off on cameras so there is nothing in the bank to be stolen. Hah! ;o)
 
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I do not think of Adobe as evil. New releases of LR could cost money, too. Adobe just went to a different business model along with a lot of software foundries. I am not saying I like this new model. This is just an observation.

I understand caution with software. But if that package were bleeding it would be pretty well known. I see that recently routers have been infected with malware. I checked about updating the firmware in mine. I cannot. Starlink. I guess they handle it on their end. They would not want a massive data breach throughout their network.

FWIW I scan daily on Linux and whenever I am on W10 when I also update whatever needs updating. I also update Linux whenever updates are available. I believe that the most recent software is almost always the most secure. The only virus I have had was on a BLU phone and I had to change connected emails two or three items to be free of that. The phones are useless now. Some evil critter is in there, and will not allow updates. I keep my Nokia up to snuff, too. This is nothing to be taken lightly. Luckily I have pissed all my money off on cameras so there is nothing in the bank to be stolen. Hah! ;o)
I don't think of Adobe as being evil. I have a subscription and will continue to do so.
 
They're not evil, but they're certainly not noble. The ideal software model (IMO, only) would be a program that costs somewhere around $100 and is updated for free with a few new features over some limited period, say 2 years. After that a new version would be released with existing users being offered an upgrade at something south of the purchase price.

Adobe has built themselves an empire and has somewhat of a captive audience, everyone else is an also-ran. While it's not a monopoly it absolutely allows them to set their own pricing without paying much attention to how competitive they are.
 
They're not evil, but they're certainly not noble. The ideal software model (IMO, only) would be a program that costs somewhere around $100 and is updated for free with a few new features over some limited period, say 2 years. After that a new version would be released with existing users being offered an upgrade at something south of the purchase price.

Adobe has built themselves an empire and has somewhat of a captive audience, everyone else is an also-ran. While it's not a monopoly it absolutely allows them to set their own pricing without paying much attention to how competitive they are.
I don't agree with the policy but many software titles are subscription only these days.. I do some IT work for a local company and they use and need Microsoft Office, QuickBooks and AutoCAD. All of these are subscription only and are very pricey. After one year, they do not only not get updates, you can't even pay to get support. The beauty of the Adobe products is that I can pick up the phone and call them and talk to a human, and that is a 24/7 service and so far, they have answered pretty quickly. When I need that help, the $10.00 per month seems pretty trivial.
 
I don't agree with the policy but many software titles are subscription only these days.. I do some IT work for a local company and they use and need Microsoft Office, QuickBooks and AutoCAD. All of these are subscription only and are very pricey. After one year, they do not only not get updates, you can't even pay to get support. The beauty of the Adobe products is that I can pick up the phone and call them and talk to a human, and that is a 24/7 service and so far, they have answered pretty quickly. When I need that help, the $10.00 per month seems pretty trivial.
All fine. I work for a multi-national engineer/consultant firm. We use all of those mentioned plus Revit and several others. In one case we're talking about programs for corporations, and the other is for individuals. $10 a month is trivial until you do it how many times? How many forums do you support? Flickr? Other clubs or groups? It adds up.
 
All fine. I work for a multi-national engineer/consultant firm. We use all of those mentioned plus Revit and several others. In one case we're talking about programs for corporations, and the other is for individuals. $10 a month is trivial until you do it how many times? How many forums do you support? Flickr? Other clubs or groups? It adds up.
Yes, it sure does.
 
Libre Office or Open Office will do well over 90% of what MS Office does and do it for free. There may be a small fee for businesses, one-time. The old model of pay and get updates for a couple of years and then buy a new release is still around with some software foundries.

In defense of Adobe, part of how they got where they are is by coming to market with way the best package and by pouring money into it to keep it the best. Others have caught up but are too late to market. It is like ProTools in audio. Not the best but popular. Samplitude/Sequoia from Magix is easier and more powerful and catching up. But there is still that large ProTools installed base. The marketplace is tough with lots of ear-biting and eye-gouging.
 
They're not evil, but they're certainly not noble. The ideal software model (IMO, only) would be a program that costs somewhere around $100 and is updated for free with a few new features over some limited period, say 2 years. After that a new version would be released with existing users being offered an upgrade at something south of the purchase price.

Adobe has built themselves an empire and has somewhat of a captive audience, everyone else is an also-ran. While it's not a monopoly it absolutely allows them to set their own pricing without paying much attention to how competitive they are.

The old way Adobe PhotoShop worked was that you bought the initial package (pricing varied, but it was not cheap). About every three years they released an updated version, and you could buy it (in my country) for about $300, so it averaged about $100 / year, paid in lumps every three years or so. That might have come close to what you are asking for if you are in the US (I didn't bother tracking the US pricing for PhotoShop). There were some minor updates to the software, and of course the RAW updates for new cameras, but the big functionality came out with the new version every 3 years. It meant adjusting to a bunch of changes in a lump, so much so that there were books published covering all the changes from one version to the next.

When the subscription model arrived, I was dubious, and didn't buy in for a while. But I looked at the costing after a year, and realised that it cost about the same, but the new functionality came out at a more steady pace (easier to learn and adjust to), and the RAW updates were more frequent (I didn't need to wait as long for my new camera to be supported). It also meant I wasn't facing a big lump of a charge every 3 years.

I'm no Adobe apologist, and I resent some of their practices in other areas (I intensely dislike a couple of their other products), but I think the subscription for their photo tools is fine. I'd never buy the entire Creative Suite, so I can't comment on that.

It's interesting that there seem to be more competitors now - things like DxO PhotoLab, for example - which are using the previous Adobe pricing model. If you'd rather pay a lump every so often instead, they will happily take your money...
 
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