The MacCreate blog noted the discontent, and contacted Apple to obtain an assurance that the company would not abandon its professional users, even as it refocused its video editing suite to fit where its revenues were coming from.
The site reportedly received an official comment stating, "Final Cut Pro is the first choice for professional video editors and weâve never been more excited about its future. The next version of Final Cut is going to be awesome and our pro customers are going to love it."
Apple's response was apparently originally directed to CNET, which reported in a post by Jim Dalrymple that any efforts to retarget Final Cut Pro to match the needs of its actual audience "would mean Apple would target customers moving to Final Cut Studio from the company's more basic iMovie application, instead of continuing to offer more high-end features designed for video professionals."
Dalrymple's conclusion was not based on anything reported by AppleInsider, nor are the prosumers who buy Final Cut Express or Studio likely to be using iMovie or expecting an iLife-style app.
Dalrymple also speculated that, due to the presence of iMovie and Final Cut Express, "the Final Cut team should be free to concentrate on more high-end features." The information provided to AppleInsider by person with inside knowledge of Apple's plans does not support Dalrymple's speculation.
Too early to worry
The fact the Appleâs Professional Applications Design Group is still hiring a Senior Visual Interface Designer and Senior Human Interface Designer to help design future iterations of its "high-visibility applications that are used daily by creative professionals working in post-production," as reported by AppleInsider last week, makes it clear that the work on Final Cut's future direction is both still under way and still targeted to serve the needs of professionals.
At the same time, the role of Final Cut Pro to sell high end Macs or to earn substantial software revenues is clearly changing, both as high end Mac sales remain largely static and as the price of Final Cut Studio has dropped.
Apple still maintains a strong position among serious professionals however, with a 2007 SCRI study indicating that Final Cut Pro had a 49% share of the US professional editing market, compared to with Avid's 22% share. A 2008 survey by the American Cinema Editors Guild said that 21% of their members were Final Cut Pro users (a figure growing from previous surveys) while the rest were using Avid.
The changes Apple makes to its $1,000 Final Cut Studio package will certainly take into account the needs of its existing user base, and will assuredly not introduce the type of drastic changes Apple made to its largely free iMovie title in 2007.
40 Comments
Worrying about rumors is something pro users shouldn't be concerned with...
Then again, 'pro user groups' are usually dominated by prosumers who want to feel superior over other prosumers. Working pros generally don't have time at the end of the day to go to Final Cut Pro meetings and club picnics.
http://www.macnn.com/articles/10/05/...osumer.switch/
Don't you think the name of this article ought to be "Apple flatly denies our thinly sourced rumor about dumbing down FCP" rather than "Professional Final Cut Pro users worried about upcoming changes"?
Or maybe "Some people on the web react to our patently untrue story about dumbing down FCP, the refutation of which we're just going to kinda slip in while still talking about users 'worrying' about the false things we previously said, the net effect of which is to make us seem simultaneously duplicitous and possibly insane"?
Really guys, a retraction and "we regret the error" would be more appropriate.
Don't you think the name of this article ought to be "Apple flatly denies our thinly sourced rumor about dumbing down FCP" rather than "Professional Final Cut Pro users worried about upcoming changes"?
Or maybe "Some people on the web react to our patently untrue story about dumbing down FCP, the refutation of which we're just going to kinda slip in while still talking about users 'worrying' about the false things we previously said, the net effect of which is to make us seem simultaneously duplicitous and possibly insane"?
Really you guys, a retraction and "we regret the error" would be more appropriate.
Awesome. I was checking the site all day to see what appleinsider would say in response. This blog post is a mixed bag of stats and nonsense.
Final Cut Pro is, and will be for a long time to come, great software for making movies and TV.
Your headline would be much more fitting.
Worrying about rumors is something pro users shouldn't be concerned with...
Then again, 'pro user groups' are usually dominated by prosumers who want to feel superior over other prosumers. Working pros generally don't have time at the end of the day to go to Final Cut Pro meetings and club picnics.
Ditto. If something like that happens, there's nothing to worry about - just switch to Avid or (back to) Premiere Pro. I wouldn't have probably switched to FCP in the first place if my previous system managed to keep state-of-the-art. It's bound to flip-flop eventually.
Editors simply need to get their work done. Final Cut is my preference for now, but editing is my job. (and my life...sigh)