Adobe will not provide a
quick update to allow its flagship
Photoshop
graphics editing suite to run on Intel-powered
Apple Macs because
the cost of creating such an application is too high.
"There is no limited-cost option for getting most of the performance
available on the platform for Photoshop in a short amount of time," Adobe
engineer Scott Byer wrote on a
company
blog.
Byer claimed that creating a version of the application for OS X on Intel is
"no small task" because Apple's
Xcode
development tool is unable to handle the job.
"Apple is doing an amazing job at catching up rapidly, but the truth is that
we don't yet have a shipping Xcode in hand that handles a large application
well," he wrote.
Apple chief executive Steve Jobs revealed in June
that the company would switch to
Intel processors, when he
also unveiled the latest version of Xcode.
Jobs promised at the time that switching would be easy for developers. But
Byer's blog points out that the process is more complicated.
Owing to Apple's market share in the graphics design sector, the availability
of Photoshop is considered a key obstacle for professional users to switch to
Apple hardware running Intel chips.
Apple currently uses Intel chips in its
iMac,
MacBook Pro and
Mac Mini machines.
The iBook and
Power Mac machines
are still powered by IBM's
PowerPC
chips.
Apple's switch from PowerPC to Intel chips constituted a major change for
software vendors because the two processor families have different
architectures.
In a sense the chips speak a different language; for an application to work
on the Intel chips programmers have to teach them the Intel language.
To make for a smooth transition, Apple has created
Rosetta which
translates PowerPC instructions into Intel code. But this interpreter makes for
much slower calculations.
Tests indicate that Photoshop on the new Intel Macs runs at only
half the speed of a previous generation PowerPC machine.
The newest version of Photoshop,
CS2,
was released in April last year. Adobe declined to give a projected release date
for the next version, but said that it typically takes 18 to 24 months.
This would indicate that an OS X Intel-ready version of the application could
take until April 2007.
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