Affinity photo is not a photo catalog - so is more a photoshop than a lighroom alternative. Look a Darktable - an powerful and free open source lightroom alternative.
Yes to both. I stopped paying for Adobe when they switched to RENTING. Started with them _before_ Photoshop, and used _everything_ Adobe as a proud fanboy/designer/director for a _long_ time. Today, my agency uses the full Affinity suite and DaVinci Resolve. 100% Adobe free, and very happy.
Adobe broke my heart a few years ago, their prices which were one time, then monthly, then yearly, then the cancel fees are just a slap to millions of people, one insider said they planned on limiting the average people to focus on bigger design companies/corporations. They just plainly do not care for the average user, and are willing to loose millions by slapping and not listening to their normal low end designers or even beginners which loved their software. The legal theft has grown to an all time high in Adobe and I replaced After Effects and Photoshop thanks to some cool software companies that over the past years have listened to the requests of normal people. I love that because of them listening to us unlike Adobe, they are getting features the same and even better than Adobe software. Their prices are one time, and their ears are open all who give them advice or requests. Pros, average, new designers are seeing Adobe's abuse on their own people. I hope they all can see and get what they need from different design software companies without feeling like a slave of Adobe.
Davinci is magnificent. Photoshoot and Lightroom is a bit trickier, especially Lightroom as everything else is much, much slower, even Capture One, they still did not solve the problems with 5K and 4K screens previews, so slow. Refreshing preview after anything you touch is so slow, not in real time, this is unacceptable.
I switched from Lr to DxO PhotoLab, and it's working very nicely for me. No all the DAM features of Lr, but my organizational scheme does the heavy lifting on that anyway.
I have tried out both and am impressed with both. My channel videos are now edited on DaVinci and I don't miss Premiere at all. For large bulk RAW edits, I do use ACR still because Affinity cannot do that yet. Congrats on growing your channel. From one small TH-camrs, I have subscribed for more.
What learning curve? I jumped on affinity and was producing in one day. It’s extremely similar. I jumped on davinci at work and was producing in a couple of days…
About as much when switching from Quark to Indesign. Took me about a month whilst working on multiple titles. Switching from Indesign to Affinity Publisher has been about the same. I would say Affinity Publisher is more Quark like than Adobe. Once I had sorted the short key cuts to match Indesign I stupidly took a month before I got round to doing this, and it took a day to do, it is now fab to use.
I’m spending $80 a month for magazine publishing. Graphics department primarily uses In Design then Photoshop and the pages are exported online as pdfs. Does Afinity also have the ability to publish like In Design does? Does Afinity have any AI abilities like PS or is there a plugin that works with it?
Does Afinity also have the ability to publish like In Design does? YES, Affinity Publisher, and is an exactly InDesign clone. Affinity can export directly in PDF. Does Afinity have any AI abilities like PS or is there a plugin that works with it? NO, but that's exactly the point of being cheap. AI means a subscription model, because it needs a lot of processing power (hardware, graphic cards, or renting the hardware) and lots of side programming. Meanwhile, Affinity doesn't need AI, because its selection tools are quite good. It lacks just a better algoritm for eliminating things from a picture, but there are other good solutions for that (Capture One, ON1 Photo Raw, etc)
I use and am very satisfied with Davinci! in regards to Affinity: Is there an Ai based photo restoration tool? Some photos need more than de.noising and sharpening. If there is, does it means Affinity owns and can use your content as ADOBE does?
Funny, when watching your video about leaving adobe, YT gave me ad to subscribe for Adobe Premiere... I guess they're really fighting to keep their cash cow.
Mark, You forgot to tell US that Davinci Resolve has a Paid Version. But I prefer Free. Thanks for showing Affinity, I've not tried either one yet. Terry
I'm currently making this switch for photo (DxO PureRAW4 + Affinity Photo 2) and use Photo Mechanic to manage assets. Not perfect but looking forward to ditching Adobe. (If you need the best color management consider Capture 1 for that even though it's another subscription). Another alternative could be DxO PhotoLab Elite, as it looks at your existing folder structure. DaVinci Resolve is a steeper learning curve for me but amazing re: quality.
Adobe has a really great products, but the way they sell them or maybe I should say "rent" - it's comical. I'm not sure if I wanna pay Adobe anymore. I feel like I will give Affinity and Davinci Resolve a try. Especially now when my laptop should be able to run Davinci without a problems like a previous one. I see that Affinity still lacks of some features and options, but hey, maybe we should just give them some time, becauase who knows what they will add in the furure. I think Adobe is also aware of people switching to other softwares and maybe they will become less greedy (yeah... probably no lol). Really good video and I just subscribed
In Affinity Photo, you can paste inside a selection, but it has to be on a pixel layer, and the selection has to be filled. While this _works,_ it seems quirky to me. You can paste inside a _shape_ in no problem.
@@jean_mollycutpurse_winchester Sure. On an empty pixel layer, create your selection, fill with a color (doesn't matter), choose Edit > Paste Inside (Ctrl-Alt-V on Windows). The filled selection then acts as a mask for the pasted content; the content itself can be re-positioned/modified as needed. What threw me was expecting to be able to do this with an empty selection; I _think_ that's how it worked in Photoshop. (Yay, I'm forgetting Photoshop!) Hope that helps.
Good stuff. I loath Adobe to a level that is unhealthy. I quit about 5 years ago after handing them $1000's of dollars over the years. I just wanted a break for 6 months as I was travelling and yup, had to pay the full remainder of an annual subscription. If they were in my country I would firebom the joint.
I think you've adressed the question in a wrong, or incomplete way. That's not the main reason people are leaving Adobe. In fact Adobe is being sued by the Costumers Agencies in the EUA, not because of the unsubscription fee, but because they are making it "impossible" / very hard the process for the costumers. The subscription mode has been like that for years. since they switch from a one time payment pack to own the software (called Creative Suit), to a subscription plan (called Creative Cloud); in this Creative Cloud, you never own the software, instead you license the various programs in a year-based plan, that you pay every month. Lets faced it, the same occurs with your telecomunication operator (at least in my country). You make a 2 year contract with, say Vodafone, and if you want to cancel that contract before and change to another operaator, the company will charge you with whats left. Its basicly the same here. The main issue with Adobe is their latest Terms of Service, that you MUST agree and in which you give Adobe a license for infinite time, of every document you upload to their cloud. In other terms, every picture, vid, sound, document, etc.... that you produce, Adobe gets to do with it whatever she wants. You still own your documents, but Adobe gets infinite license to use them - for example, to train their AI. Another import issu is your privacy, since in those updated TOS, you authorize Adobe to search your documents in your PC. I'm a profession image editor and I work with government agencies; news agencies; private clients. In every work, I sign a privacy contract with my costumers... And now some guy in Adobe has access to them??? That's the real issue here.
I was just going to comment the same thing... a bit tired of the overuse of the word "literally". Not to mention people aren't *switching* to Resolve... it's had a huge userbase for many years.
It's how TH-cam works: you need a clickbait title and those kind of statements to get a bit of attention. Of course a lot of people is switching to DaVinci Resolve, but not everyone. For example, motion graphers cannot leave AE, Photoshop and Illustrator because Fusion sucks for those kind of jobs: it's slow, they way it handles keyframes it's a nightmare compared to AE, there is no direct integration with any software like AI or PS, etc... Not to mention that nodes are great for compositing, not for motion graphics.
All it takes is a large publishing house Tech dept and accounts dept to suggest a switch to Affinity. A small amount of training downtime and Adobes revenue is reduced and the company is saving money in zero rental costs. This keeps happening then finally Adobe is no longer the monopoly. Who is going to be first?
I've seen people mention this and I'm surprised people actually use that... Like, for what? It only produces low quality vector of whatever you put, maybe not for flat icons tho...
@@lazydude5681 Interesting. I've had _very_ good results with Inkscape's Trace Bitmap function, both for simple line art like icons as well as much more complex full color objects. As much as I'd like to see this in Affinity, Inkscape fills this gap for me extremely well.
I am not yet subscribed to Adobe and I don’t plan to. Yes, roughly 10 bucks a month is not that much but the idea to pay that for the rest of my life is insanity. They put a lot of work into the catalog so that you get attached to it and don’t want to lose it ever again. The editing part can be replaced easily but they know they can trick people into lifelong payments as long as they become their essential asset management homepage.
This story is relevant and growing because more and more creatives are getting fed up with Adobe's greedy gouging. Adobe needs to ditch their subscription model, and especially the unconscionable early cancelation fee, which they've implemented because they're hemorrhaging users. People want out. I'm one of them. I split as soon as my sub was up. Been on Davinci ever since and it's honestly sooo much better.
@c0ldc0ne I re-read the Press release and V2 is not mentioned. Their statement includes " we are committed to continue to offer perpetual licenses in the future".
@@vkrickles I think it was the video from the (former?) CEO of Affinity, announcing the acquisition, that specifically tied their current policy to the V2 versions. I remember it caused a bit of a ruckus. Let's hope it was just an unfortunate choice of words.
@c0ldc0ne I think we all hope that Affinity will continue to provide great software at a reasonable price. Canva, the new owners, will be offering Affinity software to "Education" for free. That bodes well for the future. But things change!!
I don't really see a big problem in reading and understanding the agreement text of the subscription contract. Adobe offers annual subscriptions with monthly payments. There are no monthly subscriptions. It's not that difficult to understand. The real annoyances with Adobe, in my opinion, lie in certain details of the applications and the constant conversions and changes to Adobe's offerings. I'm extremely angry with Adobe in many ways, but this concerns specific details of specific applications. "Leaving Adobe" is a rather simple-minded slogan, because what does it actually mean? Adobe is a company that offers a huge number of different applications. Which Adobe application exactly is worse/better than a certain alternative? Do you want to spend just 8 minutes on this? Davinci Resolve is certainly one of the best you can get for video editing, and in my opinion you don't need Adobe for that. But I haven't found a really practical alternative to replace Lightroom, for example, when I need to edit hundreds of RAW photos in a weekend. These are just some examples. Take a look at the entire portfolio of Adobe applications! You could make TH-cam videos about this for the rest of your life.
It's not that it's difficult to understand, we're not stupid. It just sucks. Most people don't need the entire suite of Adobe apps. The audience for this video mostly uses Photoshop, Lightroom, Premiere and After Effects. As you say, LR isn't easily replaceable at this time, but the others are, and we're raising awareness that there are alternatives for those who are fed up.
@@ontheruntonowhere If someone uses Photoshop professionally, why should he be angry that he has to take out an annual subscription? Will his professional activity not last that long?
@@Visual_Notes You tell me. I don't know the situation of every creative out there. I imagine there are many who are not full-time, not yet successful, recently laid-off, etc. I imagine there are many who can't afford to spend hundreds of dollars a year on tooling, or don't enjoy getting gouged for early cancellation because their life situation changes or they find something better and less expensive.
LR is probably the only Adobe software for which there is still no good alternative. BUT there are alternatives. ON1 Photo RAW, DxO PhotoLab, Capture One Pro, Skylum Luminar and Aperty
So you are one of those people who got into the trend of making videos against Adobe? A giant company that makes $250 billion a year? A company that has revolutionized art development with software in human history? A company that has been offering various industry-standard software for over 40 years? Alright
Has it been offering various industry standards? I have been working for more than 10 years in the creative industry. Adobe has barely changed; it's the same boring software, just focusing on using AI stuff, adding NOTHING to the creative field. I am testing Affinity now, and believe me, in terms of user experience and tools that are truly useful, Affinity should be the standard for creative software.
@@AmielCetraro Do you think i really care how much money this company is making? I dont give a fuck as far as i am earning enough with the tools i am paying. This is like saying i dont wanna drink Coca Cola do you know how much money they earn. They didnt change a drink for the last 100 years. Sorry but you have no argument
You are simply being paid by competitors. There is nothing wrong with Adobe and nobody is leaving the markt standard applications, simply because the whole market works with it and because it's by far the best there is. Your channel is bogus.
I am not paid by anyone at this point but I value your opinion. Adobe softwares are great but that doesn't there couldn't be better alternatives out there. Personally I prefer to use Davinci Resolve now and getting used to Affinity and other softwares.
PS, Pr and AE are easily replaced. LR is admittedly the best, but it's only a matter of time until something else comes along and starts chipping away at its market share, as happened with the others. I'm networked with a ton of freelance creatives who've left Adobe over the subscription model and early cancellation bs, as I have. We talk to each other, and Adobe is definitely a topic. People who work for big agencies can afford to stay with Adobe because they don't pay, their companies do.
Hey guys!
Are you already using Davinci Resolve?
Have you tried Affinity Photo yet?
Write me in the comments?
Yes ! Love it ! ❤
Affinity photo is not a photo catalog - so is more a photoshop than a lighroom alternative. Look a Darktable - an powerful and free open source lightroom alternative.
Yes to both. I stopped paying for Adobe when they switched to RENTING. Started with them _before_ Photoshop, and used _everything_ Adobe as a proud fanboy/designer/director for a _long_ time. Today, my agency uses the full Affinity suite and DaVinci Resolve. 100% Adobe free, and very happy.
Affinity are offering a 6 month free trial, no strings and all features. Good time to give a try.
Not to mention the 50% discount for the next 2 weeks.
Exactly what I thought and did. Love Affinity Photo and great to see another channel exposing Adobe.
A long time user of Affinity Photo I have to say that it's not a replacement for Lightroom's asset management function.
I am using Darktabale. It is much better than Lightroom, and FREE
What about Adobe Bridge? It's free,but does it do the same as Lightroom photo management?
@@tonyclif1try rawtherapee, I have transitions to that app for about 3 weeks and it does the job great like lightroom and it’s free open source
I switched yesterday and canceled Adobe.
Adobe broke my heart a few years ago, their prices which were one time, then monthly, then yearly, then the cancel fees are just a slap to millions of people, one insider said they planned on limiting the average people to focus on bigger design companies/corporations. They just plainly do not care for the average user, and are willing to loose millions by slapping and not listening to their normal low end designers or even beginners which loved their software. The legal theft has grown to an all time high in Adobe and I replaced After Effects and Photoshop thanks to some cool software companies that over the past years have listened to the requests of normal people. I love that because of them listening to us unlike Adobe, they are getting features the same and even better than Adobe software. Their prices are one time, and their ears are open all who give them advice or requests. Pros, average, new designers are seeing Adobe's abuse on their own people. I hope they all can see and get what they need from different design software companies without feeling like a slave of Adobe.
Davinci is magnificent. Photoshoot and Lightroom is a bit trickier, especially Lightroom as everything else is much, much slower, even Capture One, they still did not solve the problems with 5K and 4K screens previews, so slow. Refreshing preview after anything you touch is so slow, not in real time, this is unacceptable.
So true… Working on 5k-displays is painful, even worse using the 2nd display function in Lightroom. Capture One is, in my opinion, a tiny bit better.
I switched from Lr to DxO PhotoLab, and it's working very nicely for me. No all the DAM features of Lr, but my organizational scheme does the heavy lifting on that anyway.
I recommend switching to Davinci resovle studio ! 😍 It's worth it and what's more with the automatic subtitle integration !
I have tried out both and am impressed with both. My channel videos are now edited on DaVinci and I don't miss Premiere at all. For large bulk RAW edits, I do use ACR still because Affinity cannot do that yet.
Congrats on growing your channel. From one small TH-camrs, I have subscribed for more.
I Left Adobe Rental A While Back. I Now Use On1 Phot Raw.
Might give it a try as well :)
@@MarkDanien It's Good! It's Also Yours To Keep For Life.
The trouble lies with LEARNING CURVES
Not so much different.
When I used Affinity, the controls already felt familiar after Adobe.
What learning curve? I jumped on affinity and was producing in one day. It’s extremely similar. I jumped on davinci at work and was producing in a couple of days…
@@MarkDanien You mean its basically a copy of adobe photoshop lol
About as much when switching from Quark to Indesign. Took me about a month whilst working on multiple titles. Switching from Indesign to Affinity Publisher has been about the same. I would say Affinity Publisher is more Quark like than Adobe. Once I had sorted the short key cuts to match Indesign I stupidly took a month before I got round to doing this, and it took a day to do, it is now fab to use.
Davinci and Affinity are good, but a proper replacement for batch editing like Lightroom I didn't find...
Capture One is the best
What about masking in affinity like in Lightroom ? Will I be able to do that as well ? Select aky , object , person etc ?
I’m spending $80 a month for magazine publishing.
Graphics department primarily uses In Design then Photoshop and the pages are exported online as pdfs.
Does Afinity also have the ability to publish like In Design does?
Does Afinity have any AI abilities like PS or is there a plugin that works with it?
Does Afinity also have the ability to publish like In Design does? YES, Affinity Publisher, and is an exactly InDesign clone.
Affinity can export directly in PDF.
Does Afinity have any AI abilities like PS or is there a plugin that works with it? NO, but that's exactly the point of being cheap. AI means a subscription model, because it needs a lot of processing power (hardware, graphic cards, or renting the hardware) and lots of side programming. Meanwhile, Affinity doesn't need AI, because its selection tools are quite good.
It lacks just a better algoritm for eliminating things from a picture, but there are other good solutions for that (Capture One, ON1 Photo Raw, etc)
Mark, is that a Zoom H4N that you are using at 1:50?
@@ret1red4life No it’s the Zoom H1n, I even made a video about it.
I use and am very satisfied with Davinci! in regards to Affinity: Is there an Ai based photo restoration tool? Some photos need more than de.noising and sharpening. If there is, does it means Affinity owns and can use your content as ADOBE does?
This vid was a call to action for me.
Can you do tethered shoot with Affinity ? I am thinking of getting Affinity too.
Funny, when watching your video about leaving adobe, YT gave me ad to subscribe for Adobe Premiere... I guess they're really fighting to keep their cash cow.
Mark, You forgot to tell US that Davinci Resolve has a Paid Version. But I prefer Free. Thanks for showing Affinity, I've not tried either one yet. Terry
Just grabbed luminar neo on sale. Might try the ipad version of affinity 👌🏾
I heard Luminar's AI is amazing 🤔
I'm currently making this switch for photo (DxO PureRAW4 + Affinity Photo 2) and use Photo Mechanic to manage assets. Not perfect but looking forward to ditching Adobe. (If you need the best color management consider Capture 1 for that even though it's another subscription). Another alternative could be DxO PhotoLab Elite, as it looks at your existing folder structure. DaVinci Resolve is a steeper learning curve for me but amazing re: quality.
Adobe has a really great products, but the way they sell them or maybe I should say "rent" - it's comical. I'm not sure if I wanna pay Adobe anymore. I feel like I will give Affinity and Davinci Resolve a try. Especially now when my laptop should be able to run Davinci without a problems like a previous one. I see that Affinity still lacks of some features and options, but hey, maybe we should just give them some time, becauase who knows what they will add in the furure. I think Adobe is also aware of people switching to other softwares and maybe they will become less greedy (yeah... probably no lol). Really good video and I just subscribed
Affinity? Pixelmator Pro? Krita? I’d be happy if I were able to paste an image into a selection. I could do that in photoshop 2
You can do that in Paint Shop Pro.
@@Michael-fw5ef thank you I'll check that out
In Affinity Photo, you can paste inside a selection, but it has to be on a pixel layer, and the selection has to be filled. While this _works,_ it seems quirky to me. You can paste inside a _shape_ in no problem.
@@LV4EVR thank you.
I should dearly love a step-by-step description on how to do that because I believe I have exhausted all possibilities.
@@jean_mollycutpurse_winchester Sure. On an empty pixel layer, create your selection, fill with a color (doesn't matter), choose Edit > Paste Inside (Ctrl-Alt-V on Windows). The filled selection then acts as a mask for the pasted content; the content itself can be re-positioned/modified as needed. What threw me was expecting to be able to do this with an empty selection; I _think_ that's how it worked in Photoshop. (Yay, I'm forgetting Photoshop!) Hope that helps.
Good stuff. I loath Adobe to a level that is unhealthy. I quit about 5 years ago after handing them $1000's of dollars over the years. I just wanted a break for 6 months as I was travelling and yup, had to pay the full remainder of an annual subscription. If they were in my country I would firebom the joint.
Great video, thanks!
I think you've adressed the question in a wrong, or incomplete way. That's not the main reason people are leaving Adobe.
In fact Adobe is being sued by the Costumers Agencies in the EUA, not because of the unsubscription fee, but because they are making it "impossible" / very hard the process for the costumers.
The subscription mode has been like that for years. since they switch from a one time payment pack to own the software (called Creative Suit), to a subscription plan (called Creative Cloud); in this Creative Cloud, you never own the software, instead you license the various programs in a year-based plan, that you pay every month.
Lets faced it, the same occurs with your telecomunication operator (at least in my country). You make a 2 year contract with, say Vodafone, and if you want to cancel that contract before and change to another operaator, the company will charge you with whats left. Its basicly the same here.
The main issue with Adobe is their latest Terms of Service, that you MUST agree and in which you give Adobe a license for infinite time, of every document you upload to their cloud. In other terms, every picture, vid, sound, document, etc.... that you produce, Adobe gets to do with it whatever she wants. You still own your documents, but Adobe gets infinite license to use them - for example, to train their AI.
Another import issu is your privacy, since in those updated TOS, you authorize Adobe to search your documents in your PC.
I'm a profession image editor and I work with government agencies; news agencies; private clients. In every work, I sign a privacy contract with my costumers... And now some guy in Adobe has access to them???
That's the real issue here.
They are both serious issues and reasons to switch.
Masking Like LR is the main reason still on ADOBE
0:04 "Literally everyone is leaving Adobe for different softwares"
Nonsense.
I was just going to comment the same thing... a bit tired of the overuse of the word "literally". Not to mention people aren't *switching* to Resolve... it's had a huge userbase for many years.
Yessense
Yes, exactly. Why would anyone start a video with a patently false sentence? It's just silly
It's how TH-cam works: you need a clickbait title and those kind of statements to get a bit of attention. Of course a lot of people is switching to DaVinci Resolve, but not everyone. For example, motion graphers cannot leave AE, Photoshop and Illustrator because Fusion sucks for those kind of jobs: it's slow, they way it handles keyframes it's a nightmare compared to AE, there is no direct integration with any software like AI or PS, etc... Not to mention that nodes are great for compositing, not for motion graphics.
All it takes is a large publishing house Tech dept and accounts dept to suggest a switch to Affinity. A small amount of training downtime and Adobes revenue is reduced and the company is saving money in zero rental costs. This keeps happening then finally Adobe is no longer the monopoly. Who is going to be first?
Affinty's lack of autotrace is problematic.
It’s easy to use Inkscapes autotrace in combination with affinity designer.
I've seen people mention this and I'm surprised people actually use that... Like, for what? It only produces low quality vector of whatever you put, maybe not for flat icons tho...
@@lazydude5681 Interesting. I've had _very_ good results with Inkscape's Trace Bitmap function, both for simple line art like icons as well as much more complex full color objects. As much as I'd like to see this in Affinity, Inkscape fills this gap for me extremely well.
I am not yet subscribed to Adobe and I don’t plan to. Yes, roughly 10 bucks a month is not that much but the idea to pay that for the rest of my life is insanity. They put a lot of work into the catalog so that you get attached to it and don’t want to lose it ever again. The editing part can be replaced easily but they know they can trick people into lifelong payments as long as they become their essential asset management homepage.
After 2 months youtubers are still riding this story like it's hot news.
This story is relevant and growing because more and more creatives are getting fed up with Adobe's greedy gouging. Adobe needs to ditch their subscription model, and especially the unconscionable early cancelation fee, which they've implemented because they're hemorrhaging users. People want out. I'm one of them. I split as soon as my sub was up. Been on Davinci ever since and it's honestly sooo much better.
Affinity was acquired by Canva and will probably become a subscription-based app like Adobe
They ( Affinity and Canva ) have stated that they will always keep the one off price option. Canva seem to be a more ethical company and Australian!
Wasn’t that statement made specifically for the V2 versions?
@c0ldc0ne I re-read the Press release and V2 is not mentioned. Their statement includes " we are committed to continue to offer perpetual licenses in the future".
@@vkrickles I think it was the video from the (former?) CEO of Affinity, announcing the acquisition, that specifically tied their current policy to the V2 versions. I remember it caused a bit of a ruckus. Let's hope it was just an unfortunate choice of words.
@c0ldc0ne I think we all hope that Affinity will continue to provide great software at a reasonable price. Canva, the new owners, will be offering Affinity software to "Education" for free. That bodes well for the future. But things change!!
Develop persona is more like Camera Raw it’s nothing like lightroom.
I don't really see a big problem in reading and understanding the agreement text of the subscription contract. Adobe offers annual subscriptions with monthly payments. There are no monthly subscriptions. It's not that difficult to understand.
The real annoyances with Adobe, in my opinion, lie in certain details of the applications and the constant conversions and changes to Adobe's offerings. I'm extremely angry with Adobe in many ways, but this concerns specific details of specific applications.
"Leaving Adobe" is a rather simple-minded slogan, because what does it actually mean? Adobe is a company that offers a huge number of different applications. Which Adobe application exactly is worse/better than a certain alternative? Do you want to spend just 8 minutes on this?
Davinci Resolve is certainly one of the best you can get for video editing, and in my opinion you don't need Adobe for that.
But I haven't found a really practical alternative to replace Lightroom, for example, when I need to edit hundreds of RAW photos in a weekend.
These are just some examples. Take a look at the entire portfolio of Adobe applications! You could make TH-cam videos about this for the rest of your life.
It's not that it's difficult to understand, we're not stupid. It just sucks. Most people don't need the entire suite of Adobe apps. The audience for this video mostly uses Photoshop, Lightroom, Premiere and After Effects. As you say, LR isn't easily replaceable at this time, but the others are, and we're raising awareness that there are alternatives for those who are fed up.
@@ontheruntonowhere If someone uses Photoshop professionally, why should he be angry that he has to take out an annual subscription? Will his professional activity not last that long?
@@Visual_Notes You tell me. I don't know the situation of every creative out there. I imagine there are many who are not full-time, not yet successful, recently laid-off, etc. I imagine there are many who can't afford to spend hundreds of dollars a year on tooling, or don't enjoy getting gouged for early cancellation because their life situation changes or they find something better and less expensive.
LR is probably the only Adobe software for which there is still no good alternative. BUT there are alternatives. ON1 Photo RAW, DxO PhotoLab, Capture One Pro, Skylum Luminar and Aperty
It's a little thing but Affinity has childish coulored icons. I would like bw and simplified
I want this guy to be my boyfriend. 😂
"Everyone"? Yes, they say they will leave.... ;-)
Subscribers up by 3.75 million since January. Now at over 33 million. I am not sure that is everyone leaving.
@@vincevinnyp9224 google trends for premiere pro are definitely well down
No, not everyone is leaving Adobe. Where do you get the information to make such a patently false statement?
He forgot to tell you, actually, except you lol
Well, then he's not much of an investigator. Man hysteria. and misuse of the word 'literally' 😂😂 @lightner3985
So you are one of those people who got into the trend of making videos against Adobe? A giant company that makes $250 billion a year? A company that has revolutionized art development with software in human history? A company that has been offering various industry-standard software for over 40 years? Alright
So you are one of those people who defends the billionaire company, like they cared bout you
@@AmielCetraroProbably while wearing a useless mask
Has it been offering various industry standards? I have been working for more than 10 years in the creative industry. Adobe has barely changed; it's the same boring software, just focusing on using AI stuff, adding NOTHING to the creative field. I am testing Affinity now, and believe me, in terms of user experience and tools that are truly useful, Affinity should be the standard for creative software.
@@AmielCetraro Do you think i really care how much money this company is making? I dont give a fuck as far as i am earning enough with the tools i am paying. This is like saying i dont wanna drink Coca Cola do you know how much money they earn. They didnt change a drink for the last 100 years. Sorry but you have no argument
@@davec503 Yes, thats the right answer. LOL
everyone? what a stupid statement
I guess everyone means every youtubers who have been paid
Affinity does not have AI features
Great.
You are simply being paid by competitors. There is nothing wrong with Adobe and nobody is leaving the markt standard applications, simply because the whole market works with it and because it's by far the best there is. Your channel is bogus.
I am not paid by anyone at this point but I value your opinion.
Adobe softwares are great but that doesn't there couldn't be better alternatives out there. Personally I prefer to use Davinci Resolve now and getting used to Affinity and other softwares.
PS, Pr and AE are easily replaced. LR is admittedly the best, but it's only a matter of time until something else comes along and starts chipping away at its market share, as happened with the others. I'm networked with a ton of freelance creatives who've left Adobe over the subscription model and early cancellation bs, as I have. We talk to each other, and Adobe is definitely a topic. People who work for big agencies can afford to stay with Adobe because they don't pay, their companies do.
@togglebutton3312 I didn’t delete any comments