

I feel the most important thing is that Adobe be as transparent as possible and tell their users what is happening.Ī side note: It is very hard to find * anything * on this site. The point of the CC was to stay on-top of updates and not worry, but Abode has broken various updates in AE (just as recent as March of this year - and it was doozy - After Effects CC 2015 (13.7.1) had the update), which makes some of us very suspicious and wary (read: me and all of my colleagues). I think the real breakdown is that Adobe is staying quiet to Pro Users that require the software to make a living. I don't think it's as much a question of waiting to install 10.12… Usually it's a safe bet to install on the update after a major OS refresh (i.e.: 10.12.1 etc…). You should be so far out ahead of these problems that we - your customers - should never even have to wonder if there will be issuesĪ new version of Premiere Pro arrives soon, and it should be ready for OS X Sierra at that time. I'll try and make that distinction a little more clear cut in the future. Sorry if my advice is sometimes misconstrued as the official Adobe line.

All I can give you is my opinion as a former pro editor and editing instructor about the when's and why's of updating your OS. To leave thousands (millions?) of editors swinging in the wind because WE didn't do a check to see if there are compatibility issues is specious.Īgain, give the team that feedback. If operating system compatibility on the day it is launched is something very important to you, I would suggest you take it up with the product team here. I'm not really aware of how the product is tested, sorry. You mean to tell us that no one at Adobe was in the Sierra beta program from DAY ONE testing to see what worked and what didn't? I'm gonna call BS on this, Kevin Monahan.
