If this is an app you consider using, why would you call it a toy?Īnyway, ASP certainly is not a toy, it is a professional art app, especially for drawing and painting, with very good editing functions. I don't know why you can not ask a friendly question. Your post title is quite offensive to the developer. Stealing the market away from Adobe would not only help so many companies and individuals, but it would also put an end to their subscription fueled by greed. I would jump at the chance to drop PS in a production environment.ĪSP is the closest thing out there to Photoshop, so there's no real learning curve for artists to do.
There are so many painting apps out there that have both MAC and PC software to offer. Really there is only 1 thing that needs to happen for this to come about.īuild a Windows version that is 8bit and above (32bit) Posthouses on large film work using ASP would only bring huge credibility to the company and the software. This needs to change especially for the freelance artist having to buy their own licenses! Photoshop is the only paint/photo app that's used for the 2D and 3D workflow. It's only the design department for TV that is on Macs. I work in the film and television industry and it's mostly PC's that are used for high end VFX work. That's pretty much limitied your potential users/sales. Will Lucky Clan step up and join the big boys?ĪSP is a great and well designed app for users on the iPad and ONLY Mac users. As Adobe's release of their professional software on the iPad this year, the same question comes to mind.