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M1 iPad Pro Applications

Community Beginner ,
Apr 21, 2021 Apr 21, 2021

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Hi, 

 

I administer a group of 30 or so Mac's for our design department, Video and photography departments, we are due to upgrade in the near future, I was hoping to go for a Hybrid model for our teams going forward so was looking at these new M1 iPad pros as the devices for use in our teams with screens and keyboards remaining in the office and the same remaining at team members homes. So my question is really will Adobe be releasing universal apps which equally run on the Desktops and iPad's with the same feature set. posted her in the InDesign area as Im looking to upgrade the design team first.

 

So is it going to happen? 

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Apr 21, 2021 Apr 21, 2021

The problem is very simple. 

 

The full power of InDesign is predicated on the ability to access a file system. Best practice with InDesign typically has a minimal base InDesign .INDD file with externally-stored assets (images, vector artwork, fonts, etc.). iPadOS assumes that a program's assets are stored with the application itself or that the application relies on cloud storage. Then there are the issues of fonts, ICC color profiles, spot color definitions, etc.

It was actually much easier to

...

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Community Expert ,
Apr 21, 2021 Apr 21, 2021

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In regards to InDesign, for a foreseeable future: No.

 

Regards,
Uwe Laubender

( ACP )

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Community Beginner ,
Apr 21, 2021 Apr 21, 2021

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Ahh, ok. so in the dim future, Maybe?

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Community Expert ,
Apr 21, 2021 Apr 21, 2021

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Well, the dim future is exactly that, "dim".

 

Regards,
Uwe Laubender

( ACP )

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Apr 21, 2021 Apr 21, 2021

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The problem is very simple. 

 

The full power of InDesign is predicated on the ability to access a file system. Best practice with InDesign typically has a minimal base InDesign .INDD file with externally-stored assets (images, vector artwork, fonts, etc.). iPadOS assumes that a program's assets are stored with the application itself or that the application relies on cloud storage. Then there are the issues of fonts, ICC color profiles, spot color definitions, etc.

It was actually much easier to have MacOS <=> Windows compatibility for InDesign (which was there from day 1 for InDesign 1.0) that it would be to have MacOS <=> iPadOS compatibility!

 

And in terms of actual use, of all the Adobe applications other than FrameMaker, InDesign is generally text intensive which certainly doesn't bode well for a device that doesn't have a native keyboard and for which the add-on keyboards are generally anything but industrial-strength and ergonomically sound.

By the time you are done getting an iPad Pro with a “large” screen along with an accessory pen as well as a keyboard, you might as well get a MacBook.

 

In terms of M1 chip-equipped Macs, I would strongly recommend not attempting to run InDesign on such systems using Rosetta 2. An ARM-native version of InDesign is in development and should be available in the not too distant future.

 

- Dov Isaacs, former Adobe Principal Scientist (April 30, 1990 - May 30, 2021)

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Community Beginner ,
Apr 22, 2021 Apr 22, 2021

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Brilliant, just the answer  needed, thanks for taking the time to fully explain.

 

Best

 

Chris

 

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