
- FINAL CUT PRO FOR MAC HIGH SIERRA MOVIE
- FINAL CUT PRO FOR MAC HIGH SIERRA UPDATE
- FINAL CUT PRO FOR MAC HIGH SIERRA PRO
- FINAL CUT PRO FOR MAC HIGH SIERRA TRIAL
FINAL CUT PRO FOR MAC HIGH SIERRA PRO
It also makes us wonder if the Mac versions could move to a subscription service (as many others have), but that’s a discussion for another day.Īll in all, it’s nice to be excited about the iPad Pro again, even with its ridiculous price and iPadOS quirks. It’s certainly disappointing that there’s no discount and a quick glance at Reddit will tell you there are many that would rather pay the whole lot upfront to get the same app they already own on an already expensive tablet. It’s also likely to upset those that have paid out potentially hundreds of dollars for the Mac version of each app. That may be very reasonable for a creative intending to build a livelihood on either, but if you’re already paying for the likes of Apple One and any other third-party subscriptions, that could be a nuisance.
FINAL CUT PRO FOR MAC HIGH SIERRA TRIAL
It’s not often such excitement arises from Apple unveiling ports of apps that should have been here for a while, but there are reasons to be cautious, too.īoth apps will offer a one-month free trial before moving to a $4.99 per month (or $49 per year) subscription. Then there’s potential for an iPad Pro with more than one USB-C port (as unlikely as it is) for transferring heaps of data into either of the apps.
FINAL CUT PRO FOR MAC HIGH SIERRA UPDATE
It’s also likely that, given Logic and Final Cut Pro work with large files, we could see an iPadOS update that overhauls the Files app which still feels cumbersome at the best of times. Okay, so the M1 iPad Air will also run Final Cut or Logic, but it’s exciting to think about what Apple could do next on the iPad Pro.


The iPad Pro also hasn’t seen a design revision in half a decade, and while we’d argue it’s not really due one because of how modern the current version looks, it’s certainly got people worried about the iPad line being condensed and the Pro being lopped off at the high end. On the other, iPadOS, while a mature platform after years of iterative updates, still works very differently from macOS, meaning simple things like multi-user support, cohesive multitasking, and much more all work very differently - or don’t exist at all. On the one hand, an iPad Pro with a 12.9-inch display will set you back over a grand, making it more expensive than a Mac without factoring in a keyboard or Apple Pencil. The iPad Pro has long existed in a weird limbo thanks to its price point and functionality. With Apple getting these announcements out of the door weeks before WWDC 2023, however, there’s a feeling that change is in the air and that Apple may just be more committed to the iPad Pro than expected. Given the disappointment that was Stage Manager on iPadOS (one of our picks for things that need an update at WWDC 2023) and the fact that the M1 iPad Air is comparable in almost all the ways that matter, it felt a little like the iPad Pro had been forgotten.

Apple already has Final Cut Pro purring on Apple Silicon Macs, but on the same processor, it felt like the company was quite happy to just concede ground to third parties.
FINAL CUT PRO FOR MAC HIGH SIERRA MOVIE
Then there’s the way Apple marketed the new tablet, dubbing it a portable movie studio and showcasing DaVinci Resolve as a killer app. The new processor is faster, sure, but arguably didn’t need to be, and Apple Pencil Hover is neat but only useful in rare situations.ĭid the iPad Pro really need a spec bump when it’s already ahead of the competition by so many metrics? Now that we know what each app is, it’s time to roll back the clock to just a few months ago, October 2022, when Apple revealed the tenth generation iPad and the iPad Pro M2.Īs we mentioned in our review of the latter device, the iPad Pro M2 is, well, basically just the iPad Pro M1.
