Adobe apologizes for 'defaming' Apple in Mac OS X Lion

Adobe acknowledges that Apple's new operating system still supports the flash content as well as before, contrary to the previous announcement from the company.

Adobe acknowledges that Apple's new operating system still supports the flash content as well as before, contrary to the previous announcement from the company.

The source from 9toMac said yesterday that many Mac users when updating to the new operating system OS X 10.7 have no longer run the flash content smoothly. Even the source said it could, OS X Lion disabled Adobe's hardware acceleration for Flash player, which is available in Snow Leopard version 10.6.

Adobe apologizes for 'defaming' Apple in Mac OS X Lion Picture 1Adobe apologizes for 'defaming' Apple in Mac OS X Lion Picture 1
Adobe made a correction just a day after accusing Apple of lack of cooperation on the new operating system.

In one of its announcements on the same day, Adobe also mentioned the same thing and disabled some of the features that occurred with its other software like Fireworks, Illustrator, Acrobat, Lightroom, Photoshop and Premiere Pro.

However, in a completely contradictory move, Adobe said its previous statements were just a mistake. On his official blog, Flash Player Team, Adone admitted that Apple " still has similar support for hardware acceleration for Flash video similar to previous Mac OS X Snow Leopard" . The ability to work slowly may be due to the fact that the company has not had software upgrades to optimize performance on OS X Lion.

Adobe apologizes for 'defaming' Apple in Mac OS X Lion Picture 2Adobe apologizes for 'defaming' Apple in Mac OS X Lion Picture 2
The relationship between Adobe and Apple is deteriorating recently.

Adobe said it will continue to work closely with Apple in the future to bring flash content to better Mac users. These content on the website now occupies quite a lot of CPU resources when operating.

Adobe and Apple have had a lot of "frustrations " in history when "Apple " does not want to put flash content on their mobile devices like iPads, iPods or iPhones. Adobe has " retaliated" the Cupertino, California, US company by reducing the price of Adobe Premierer Pro by 50% for users who are using Final Cut Pro X because Apple's software failed to launch. .

5 ★ | 1 Vote