Adobe Considers Withdrawing from Asian Markets 507
Max Groff writes "This brief ZDNet article (printer-friendly version) describes how Adobe is considering leaving its Asian markets due to the apparently high levels of piracy across the Pacific. This change would not only cut off the marketing of Adobe products to Asian markets, but also halt the development of much of the company's Asian-language software."
Go for it (Score:2)
Re:Go for it (Score:3, Informative)
Asia *is* a big market, but piracy apparently makes it much smaller. They're leaving because the real market (the one that buys their products, from them) is too small. Any other company coming in will have exactly the same market Adobe has, and they will face the same problem.
Re:Go for it (Score:2)
Re:Go for it (Score:5, Interesting)
Not necessarily. Depends on whether they're clever enough to find a way to adapt to the Asian market instead of throwing up their hands and running away.
When pirated copies of XENIX were running every bank in China, a SCO sales guy told me: "Trying to convince the Chinese not to pirate software is a waste of time--they'd just laugh. But they want to buy manuals, and the idea of paying for books is part of their culture. So let 'em copy the software if they want, but charge 'em for the doc, and you can make lots of money in China."
Re:Go for it (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Go for it (Score:2, Insightful)
For cigarettes, electronics, and cars, but the market for legally licensed software is actually pretty small.
This could be Microsoft's moment to take on Adobe (Score:2)
This may be the moment Bill's been waiting for. Of course, he has his own piracy troubles in Asian markets...
Re:This could be Microsoft's moment to take on Ado (Score:2)
Re:Go for it (Score:2)
C|Net News Article (Score:2, Informative)
Re:C|Net News Article (Score:2)
China is not a very impressive market (Score:5, Insightful)
Out of 3 billion people, 900 million of them are rural peasants who don't have a pot to pee in. These are people that are so poor that they go for months without even seeing currency, let alone using it.
100 million of them are rural farm workers who may sometimes receive a "paycheck", but who are not employed for long periods of time. These people make a fraction of what a McDonalds grill cook makes in the US.
Of the remaining 2 billion, you have a tiny elite of maybe 120-80 million people who make money in a range that is remotely similar to the west. Of all the people who receive somewhere in a living wage range, maybe 500 million of them, save 40% of their income and use 60% to live. They do this because their economy is fragile and they are subject to losing their incomes rather easily. Compare that to Americans where 4% of people's income (on average) is saved.
The Chinese do not have descretionary income to spend on software. This is what Adobe is really coming to grips with. If it were made to be incapable of stealing the software, they would just go without!
Companies that make money in China are like Coke-a-Cola, Pepsi, Marlboro. These are companies that make 80-90% of their money outside the US anyway. The rest of the companies (like Adobe) tread water for years and never turn the corner. This is the reality of the Chinese market: they are an export economy with a weak domestic economy. A place where slavery was "abolished" in 1929. A place where children participate in forced labor programs to pay for their educations. Where you recieve the death penalty for selling a fossil you dug up in your own backyard to a non-Chinese buyer.
(I have no idea why we have a normalized trade relationship with this country and yet Cuba is still under an embargo)
Adobe/Macromedia "Greatest Hits" (Score:5, Funny)
She wanted us to install Photoshop and Dreamweaver off the disk. The help deskers explained how it was a pirated copy, and how her dept. could legally purchase the software for significant discount for educational purposes. She protested, saying it was legit because she'd paid 5 dollars for it on her travels in Malaysia.
Re:Adobe/Macromedia "Greatest Hits" (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a great example of the wackiness of intellectual property law as it applies to software, in the eyes of most consumers. Because, for just about anything else except software, she'd be right!
For example, yes, it is illegal to make pirated CDs of Britney Spears albums. But it's not illegal to buy one in Malaysia, or to own one in the United States! It's not even illegal to play one in a CD player!
The software manufacturers have pulled an amazing fast one on all of us, by somehow creating a whole new set of rules to apply to their products. You can bet every other intellectual property-owning corporate entity in the world will stop at nothing until they can follow suit.
Re:Adobe/Macromedia "Greatest Hits" (Score:2)
So paying $5 for Adobe's products means you pay for the physical cost, even the distribution cost, but not for the labor cost.
Re:Adobe/Macromedia "Greatest Hits" (Score:4, Interesting)
>
> So paying $5 for Adobe's products means you pay for the physical cost, even the distribution cost, but not for the labor cost.
To play Devil's Advocate, if you've got a pirated copy, you're not exactly consuming much in the way of support costs!
(Of course, that doesn't apply to the labor cost - the developers and QA people who built it, and that's probably a larger cost than the support costs.)
But to carry your argument one step further, suppose it's bad to pirate Photoshop 6.0, because you're not paying for the labor that went into 6.0.
What about 5.0, which isn't being offered for sale?
Or 4.0? 3.0?
Yes, I'm going down the slippery slope to abandonware -- at some point, the money that went to the developers ought to be "fully depreciated".
Consider - if you incur a capital expense to buy a new building, you get to write it off against income over the life of the building, say, 20 years. If you incur a capital expense to buy something like a computer, many jurisdictions allow you to write the cost of the computer off over a shorter timeframe, say, 5 years, because computers decline in value faster than buildings.
The money you pay a programmer to write software is an expense -- you "write it off" in the same year as you pay it out. If we think of it as another form of capital expenditure (intellectual capital; the brainpower of a developer), and we write it off in the same year, we're basically saying what the tech industry already knows -- software depreciates instantly ;-)
Paying $5 for a 2-year-old game in the "bargain bin" at your local retailer is legal. Why can't paying your friendly neighborhood pirate $5 for a 5-year-old game, or Photoshop 3.0, neither of which can be found even in bargain bins anymore, be legal?
Re:Adobe/Macromedia "Greatest Hits" (Score:2)
That still doesn't justify $5 for Photoshop 6.0
Re:Adobe/Macromedia "Greatest Hits" (Score:2)
>
> That still doesn't justify $5 for Photoshop 6.0
Absolutely.
If I were writing copyright law from scratch, I'd base it on an idea like "full retail price may be charged, and full copyright protection applies, for 5 years, or until the company ceases supporting the old version, whichever comes first. After that, it's fair game."
Re:Adobe/Macromedia "Greatest Hits" (Score:2)
Alternative Adobe business models? (Score:3, Insightful)
how does Adobe afford the production costs
Release the non-trade-secret parts of the application as free software. That'll help a bit. Splitting the most proprietary parts into modules priced at $49.95 a piece might help further.
and the support costs
"No support except to registered users." That's one of the proposed models for making money off open source.
and the bandwidth costs
If they can get their install down to 10 megabytes (perhaps by not including all that d*rn clip-art), bandwidth becomes relatively cheap.
if they don't make any money on top of the distribution costs?
For downloadable software, bandwidth costs == distribution costs.
Re:Alternative Adobe business models? (Score:2)
As it stands, Adobe has the right to follow it's own business model, because it works. Show them a better way that will make them more money, and I'm sure it will work out for all parties.
Re:Adobe/Macromedia "Greatest Hits" (Score:2, Informative)
Really? (Score:3, Funny)
Cool, if I'm ever pulled over by a cop and have a happen to have some marijuana or hashish on me, I'll just tell him I bought it in Amsterdam since it's legal there and I paid for it fair and square.
That should keep me out of jail.
There is a diffrence (Score:2)
Re:Adobe/Macromedia "Greatest Hits" (Score:3, Funny)
Ha! Those western foreigners, so easily scammed!
So I have to pirate it?? (Score:2, Insightful)
If I want it, I *HAVE* to pirate it!?
Sounds like a great idea adobe.....
Re:So I have to pirate it?? (Score:5, Insightful)
So, now the pirates have two choices: stop pirating (or at least to the same extent), or lose language support for their copies.
I mean, they can pirate English versions still, but I'm sure they would prefer copies in their own languages. It is their own fault for this happening.
I don't believe that they have actually lost $4 billion, because not everyone buys copies, but even if 1% of those people would have bought copies they would have lost $40 million.
Re:So I have to pirate it?? (Score:2, Insightful)
The best part.... (Score:2)
Photoshop 4.0 works just as good as 6.0.
Quark did that a while ago... (Score:2, Interesting)
Korean version was produced (or planned) provided that a korean company would help in creating version plus guarantee certain number of sold copies; apparently (south-)Korea has similar problems but situation is perhaps not quite as bad.
English version (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:English version (Score:2)
I suspect I18N would continue... (Score:2)
Hmmm... (Score:2, Insightful)
The thing is that while their programs set the standard here in the US and many companies now depend on their products, the same is not true in Asia, where Linux is actually being adopted quite rapidly, especially now with Windows XP having copy protection in place (although that hasn't stopped many hacked versions from being produced). This may in fact be a big boon to the Linux industry as more and more users may come to find more full fledged Linux graphics solutions (GIMP is getting there).
Pirates wouldn't buy the software, any way (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, I believe that the equivalent dollar cost in pirated products is highly mis-leading. People who pirate software wouldn't buy the programs if they lost access to it. They would just do without.
Chizen said in the article that it can cost up to $750,000 to produce a Chinese-language version of a product, and extensive piracy makes it difficult for Adobe to recoup those costs.
That said, I can appreciate theirt reasons for leaving. If they spend $750k to produce the Asian version, and don't sell sufficient copies to recoup costs and profit, then they should leave. My understanding is that most companies require a 15% return-on-investment from a product, or they shut it down.
That's not 100% true (Score:3, Insightful)
The question is how to separate all of them enough to target the payers, and get them to pay.
People who do without aren't interesting to this equation or argument. It's the people who make money with the product, and people who need the product, that should be targetted.
In a very fair market way, if there isn't enough pirates who can pay, if they had to, to support the product, the product should go away. If there is enough pirates who can pay, then they can afford to sell, as long as they can convince the pirates to pay.
The question is how lack of an Asian version of the product will affect the market. Will Chinese users, for example, start to use English or Japanese versions? Older versions? Does this mean that Chinese OS X users will be, literally, up the creek?
Re:Chinese users will just localize GIMP (Score:5, Interesting)
The GIMP is ok for making web graphics. You're never going to do any serious photo retouching, CMYK color correction, under color removal, trapping, or any other necessary pre-press operation with the GIMP, though. It just isn't ready to handle the complex, precise, and finicky nature of real four-color (or more) offset press preproduction work.
Does the GIMP have monitor color calibration? Does it have color profiles for myriad pre-press proofing machines and/or offset presses? Does it have Pantone (TM) licensed color libraries? Last time I checked it didn't.
Unless China only ever produces web sites I doubt the GIMP will be a 100% useable solution.
Corel could step in with Corel PhotoPaint. It's not as good as Photoshop for the items I mentioned above. but, it's worlds better at those chores than the GIMP is. It's still not a 100% solution, though, as I will explain below.
Assuming that since the GIMP is vaguely similar to Photoshop Elements it will be able to replace Photoshop is a very slanted view on the whole situation.
Even if the GIMP could do 100% of what Photoshop does that doesn't solve the problem of providing all of the functionality of all Adobe products to China. That is, unless the GIMP has gained the ability to do short document layout (Pagemaker), long document layout (InDesign), SGML based technical document publishing (Frame), vector illustration with 100% PS3 compatibility (Illustrator), motion graphics (After Effects), video editting (Premiere), web based vector animation (Live Motion), and PDF creation and editting (Acrobat series). That list isn't all inclusive, either.
Just like GIMP != Photoshop, Photoshop != All Adobe Products.
Re:Pirates wouldn't buy the software, any way (Score:2, Insightful)
and on your other point...Yeah I've finally gotten off of all Microsoft software, except that provided for free or gotten with a purchased machine. I downloaded their MS Office for my OS X machine, and it's just such a bloated feature-itis mess now, that I can't be bothered to even pirate it. Or buy it. I'm making do with a slightly more feature-light program that comes free with every mac (AppleWorks).
Could be an opening for Microsoft... (Score:2)
Maybe this will be the opportunity they've been waiting for...
Of course, M$ suffers from massive piracy in Asia too.
Re:Could be an opening for Microsoft... (Score:2, Funny)
I can't wait until Micrsoft provides all my software!
"apparently"? (Score:2)
I should know; I have a copy of just such a CD full of Adobe software
Nah... (Score:2)
It's so much easier to just forget about a substantial portion of the world, you know?
Believe it 'cause it's true (Score:2)
Yes, i can just see how incredibly briliant that market strategy is!!!
It's not about lowering piracy. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:It's not about lowering piracy. (Score:2, Interesting)
They're not trying to stop piracy (Score:4, Insightful)
It doesn't hurt them at all to have English language versions pirated in Asia, in fact they probably prefer that to having their competitor's products pirated.
But if it costs $650,000 to produce an Asian languages version of their products (a number I can easily believe, having done localizations of much smaller products), and they don't recoup that cost, there's no point in doing it.
This is news?
Who does this really hurt? (Score:2)
However, I don't think this will hurt the pirates. Anyone willing to go to the lengths necessary to acquire the software and circumvent anti-piracy measures (serial numbers, dongles, etc.) is probably willing to put up with English menus. Photoshop and Illustrator aren't exactly language intensive applications -- they're intuitive graphics apps.
The people who will really suffer are the people who do pay for asian versions of Adobe's software (businesses, schools, etc.) and the employees who work on those versions at Adobe. If you're an internationalization guru who got laid off because international piracy is just too rampant, you're in trouble.
Re:Who does this really hurt? (Score:2)
It's not just a case of search & replace 'Printer' for 'Drucker' like translating for european languages. The software needs to deal with Unicode pretty well, and understand the layout of non-roman character sets properly. Illustrator and Pagemaker may be 'visual' software, but they deal with laying out a LOT of words.
Incidentally, this cuts both ways. It was a real challenge for me to get good Kanji truetype fonts last year when I wanted some for a software project (those cool advertising-style fonts). My OS supports Kanji, and so did my graphics software, but actually getting decent fonts was hard. Eventually I found Font Too [font-too.com] who were happy to export a CD for me.
This is the fault of the greedy software industry (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is the fault of the greedy software indust (Score:3, Insightful)
Bottom line, if you think the software costs too much then you don't really need it. Go use something else, be it Gimp or Adobe Image Effects. Dont bitch and moan about the cost of Photoshop and don't condone the piracy of the software.
What about Photoshop Elements? (Score:2)
Re:This is the fault of the greedy software indust (Score:2)
There are plenty of other free or cheaper products out there that will remove red eye from your pictures of the kids. If you need more than those programs will provide, then BUY it! Nobody has a god given right to software. We've already given the rest of the world blue jeans and knight rider episodes, why should we be expected to give you photoshop as well?
Costs of Piracy (Score:4, Funny)
That's like selling what, 10 copies of photoshop? ;)
Re:Costs of Piracy (Score:3, Funny)
$595 profit per copy translates to 1,260 copies to break even, assuming $5 in distribution and manufacturing costs.
$195 per copy translates to 3847 copies to break a slight profit.
Now, if China's piracy rate is 90% and Adobe isn't breaking even, then, at full price, then 1,260 copies is 10%, meaning then there are about 12,600 copies of Photoshop 6.0 running around. If we're talking $200 versions, then there are 38,470 copies of Photoshop 6.0 running around.
Of course this is all meaningless math games.
Maybe if they stop charging $200... (Score:2)
Why spend $200 on something like that? It's ridiculous, especially when something like The GIMP is free. If a powerful program like the GIMP is free, shouldn't Photoshop be closer to it?
Remember: only poor people pirate software.
$89 (Score:2)
What do you say to that?
Adobe has every right to charge whatever they want.
Consumers have every right to *not* buy something more expensive.
Consumers don't have the right to pirate, just as Adobe doesn't have the right to take the bits from your bank account.
Re:I disagree -- I have a RIGHT to pirate (Score:2)
Do I have the right to take your shoes?
People are NOT willing to pay $600... (Score:2)
Now, I'll admit that GIMP is not quite as good as Photoshop, but it's good enough. Having a $600 gap between The GIMP and Photoshop for a little bit of difference is not right at all.
True that piracy is illegal and they don't "have the right" to pirate software, but piracy is a form of protest. People protest high software prices through illegal piracy, just like blacks protest segregation by illegally sitting on the front of the bus. Most people may do it for more practical reasons than political (like "should I pay rent with $600 or buy a fucking piece of software?"), but it still acheives the same effect.
If only the software companies wouldn't be so blind to why they are doing this...
Sounds like a business decision to me... (Score:3, Insightful)
Despite the whining from the (lets not mince words here) pro-piracy segment of the slashdot readership, this sounds like a perfectly sound business decision.
Face facts people, corporations are not charities. If they can't get a Return On Investment, they need to invest money elsewhere. Nor will any other business simply step in, because they're not going to get any ROI either. This has already elminated entire markets. The Hong Kong movie business is basically dead because piracy is so culturally acceptable in China.
Supply and demand (Score:2, Flamebait)
They priced their product out of reach of 99% of the population, and they now complain about people not buying it. People can get creative, if they don't have the means to buy it. One copy of their software costs more than the income of a whole family for more than 80% of the population in China. Imagine you are US consumer, and your whole family earns $60K/year, and a copy (a license for a single user!) of Photoshop costs $80K. And imagine you get a chance to buy it at $100 on the black market. Go figure.
Maybe Adobe should be more creative in pricing too, if they want to get into this kind of market? Otherwise, don't fucking complain, and stick to the US/EU markets.
Isn't this exactly what they are doing? (Score:2)
Photoshop's price point isn't targetted to consumers, at $600. Photoshop elements, at $89, is targetted towards consumers.
They do understand supply and demand. They supply Photoshop at $600, and the demand doesn't exist for the product. Therefore they exit the market, since it can't support them.
Think hard on this one. (Score:2)
Open Source, while it's a great thing, really isn't enough of an answer. There are no OS equals to programs like Photoshop, Media 100, Oracle. (Yes, Virginia, I know about GIMP and PostgreSQL.)
Copy protection isn't the answer, either. Fair use, monopolistic control, hell, you all know the arguments.
Lassiez-faire isn't the answer, either. Given the option to purchase something or steal it without risk of repercussion, far too many people will do the latter. Adobe deserves revenue for their efforts, and they're apparently suffering enough in Asia that they're considering dropping the whole thing. Say whatever you will about the quality of their work beyond version whichever-you-love-most, but is this the norm you want to see developing with -other- companies?
What do you see as the middle ground?
It was always a pain, anyways (Score:2)
Anyways, I doubt they'll discontinue the print drivers. Just a few non-profitable apps.
The Gimp, Natch (Score:2)
It'll take more than hardware DRM to shut down that distribution network, I promise you...
...so why not free software? Emergin' Market nation-states could finance GPLed code development/I18N as a means of pushing their economic interests forward.
They're already used to $5 software, dammit! This market is perfect for us!
Re:The Gimp, Natch (Score:3, Insightful)
Mind now, I don't fundamentally care how many users gFoo has. Userbase is important to Free software in a couple of indirect ways: some of those users will submit bug reports or patches, or help in other ways with development; also, many users of Free software make it difficult for proprietary vendors to lock users into their products through closed formats, much less force new users to their product by making such formats into de facto standards.
Should Adobe go through with this withdrawal, I forsee (or at least hope for) benefits to Free software in that some former unlicensed users will go on to help make real Free substitutes for Adobe products -- e.g. Gimp has potential, but it ain't Photoshop yet -- or help i18nize various packages to their native locale.
Good... (Score:4, Insightful)
We care about companies breaching GPL-licenses, and we should care about these people breaching the commercial software world's licences.
Asia will never get a software industry of their own if they continue this way, and will be doomed to producing cut-throat priced commodity hardware for the rest of the world.
I hope Adobe makes it real hard to use their programs on computers where the clock is set to Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur or Beijing time, or the internet connection reveals they are connected to
If they can't pay for commercial saftware, they'll just have to settle for GPL'ed alternatives!!!
saber rattling (Score:2)
If Adobe were to pull out, some Asian competitor (or, gasp, free software) would fill their market niche, at a lower cost and probably higher quality. And those Asian competitors would have a much easier time delivering English-language versions than the other way around.
Adobe won't pull out. They are just saber rattling. Pulling out would be foolish. They'd rather give their software away than let some other company take over their market niche.
oh no! (Score:3, Funny)
Piracy is sometimes just free advertising. (Score:4, Insightful)
I have known Chinese (in China) who own little more than 2 white shirts, a pair of pants, and a bicycle.
However, they may use a computer at work to do personal jobs. They may run software on a computer at work that costs, in the U.S., more than their entire net worth.
This is not lost profit for companies like Adobe. It is free advertising and free trademark promotion.
No amount of law-making or law enforcement will make these people pay hundreds of U.S. dollars for Adobe Photoshop. However, advertise that you need someone who knows how to use Photoshop, and hundreds will apply. Is this a bad thing?
People in the U.S. get little accurate news of other countries. They often unconsciously make the assumption that other people are as rich as they are.
U.S. Senator Biden, who is an intelligent and educated man, and who is the Chairman of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, doesn't even pronounce the words correctly, yet he talks of changing (my article, see the Biden interview) [hevanet.com] the Saudi government and controlling the development of the government of Afghanistan. If Senator Biden is like this, make a guess about the knowledge of other countries of the average Adobe executive.
Adobe executives should not consider that every pirated copy is a personal attack on Adobe profitability. There are many social situations that require more social sophistication than that.
Prices for Adobe Products (Score:2, Redundant)
If you make $600 with said flimsy cardboard box and plastic CD, I think the product has paid for itself.
Justification's from Adobe's view? If the $600 price funds the development of the next version of Photoshop and keeps employees and the company afloat, that's justification.
Can anybody possibly justify taking property that doesn't belong to you?
Single pricing for items fails (Score:3, Interesting)
As I said in an earlier message (which is playing hard to find), I knew someone from India living in the United States. He made minimum wage to make his way though college. His father was one of the top engineers in an Indian company. Guess who had the higher salary? My friend, not his father.
A $15,000 yearly salary in other countries is enough to make one live like a king. In India (I've been told; perhaps someone can comment), a $15,000 U.S.-equivalent salary is enough to have a personal cook prepare your lunch, and a personal servant bring it to your workplace.
$15,000 may seem like a lot to many students, but there are countries out there where people make $1.50 an hour or less. Companies make items abroad where it is cheaper yet attempt to sell said items abroad in the same countries at U.S. pricing.
Personally, I'm predicting a severe devaluation in the U.S. dollar to come sometime within the next century or so; one cannot price an item at price A in country X and price B in Y without a third party Z coming along and moving the item from A to B at a lower cost. Given that most other currencies are worth less than the United States', the dollar likely will be devalued as we start kicking and screaming and wondering why.
There! That'll teach 'em not to be poor! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:There! That'll teach 'em not to be poor! (Score:2)
Re:There! That'll teach 'em not to be poor! (Score:2)
crazy (Score:2)
You mean they're not enjoying having a huge marketshare and no competition because software piracy gives them all the benefits of "dumping" without any fingers of blame to point at the company?
They're just a bunch of whiners trying to justify a clampdown on our rights to their paid lackeys in the government.
I pirate software (Score:2, Insightful)
I myself pirate some software titles. Yet even I can see that this article is not about Adobe trying to stop piracy. Adobe's products are aimed towards businesses and professionals, not home users. I personally dont think they expect a home user to pay the $600 for the software. In fact they probably dont mind piracy by the home user because it would extends their user base. However I do think they expect someone who makes money from the software to pay it. The artists are the people who Adobe makes photoshop for. If you are an artist who has the cash it is probably in your best interest to pay for the software. Adobes continued existance would be a good thing for them.
On the discontinuation of asian localization:
Adobe is losing money when they localize the software. If they continued to localize while losing money it would go against all business logic. does 2+2=5? Also Asians can localize the software themselves. If some korean was using OS X and an adobe app used
In the words of CmdrTaco: (Score:2)
I mean, come on, pirates can't get on a plane?
relative prices in china (Score:2)
Irony (Score:2)
It seems maybe Adobe is just simply noticing things that are already out there [foolabs.com]. No piracy, just smart minds coupled with fast fingers. Adobe is trying to make a buck. Others do it because they need to (or just want to, whatever. Sortof the same thing IMHO).
Just a thought.
Asian cultures like chinese don't believe IP (Score:3, Interesting)
In most cases, a handshake means more than a contract. Contracts in china are worth S_ _T. The government isn't going to enforce a law the entire country percieves as stupid. The chinese culture believes in practicality and utility. Take the phrase "Kung-fu". It isn't just martial arts. The phrase is applied to anyone who has refined/exceptional skill and strong work ethic. A businessman can be said to have "kung-fu" in the art of negotiation. A teacher can have "kung-fu" in inspiring students.
Adobe needs to first learn about the culture and understand it before they try to dictate how chinese people should behave. Chinese are very proud of the culture, history and tradition. No self respecting chinese is going to roll over just because adobe says so.
Bulk buy? (Score:3, Interesting)
Over a decade ago, Autodesk faced the same problem. The English version of AutoCAD was #1 in the USSR, but the copies were mostly pirated. So Autodesk cut a deal with the USSR for a bulk buy of a custom Cyrillic version. That brought in a revenue stream, and the USSR got a version that their non-English speakers could use.
Re:some child porn for you (Score:2, Insightful)
-shpoffo
Re:Prices of products. (Score:3, Insightful)
If you make $600 with said flimsy cardboard box and plastic CD, I think the product has paid for itself.
Justification's from Adobe's view? If the $600 price funds the development of the next version of Photoshop and keeps employees and the company afloat, that's justification.
Can anybody possibly justify taking property that doesn't belong to you?
Re:Prices of products. (Score:2)
If everyone, or even enough people, believed in 'taking' what they wanted, rather than through peaceful exchange, you get a much more brutal and hostile world.
Re:Prices of products. (Score:2)
Re:Prices of products. (Score:2)
Re:Prices of products. (Score:2)
In the proprietary software industry, the only way you can lower your prices and still maintain profitability is to make up for it in volume sales, and this is not one thing that a high-end photo-editor can do, so you are stuck charging $600 for the right to run the software.
THe answer to this problem is not piracy, but rather open source. Don't use Photoshop, use the GIMP instead. Open Source software also benefits from economy-of-scale, and this is a great way to help make the software more competitive. The reason is that if you base your process on the use of pirated software, you are dependent on that software, and that places you at the mercy of the manufacturer that does not care about your reaction because you are not bringing them money.
So Adobe really does not have much of a choice-- this is an area that they simply cannot compete without throwing lots of money away without any real effect. (Note: Most people pirate the most common products in their categories-- when was the last time you heard of someone selling pirated copies of Solaris for the x86?) However, this is still a problem for Adobe because other products could move in on their market-share by exploiting piracy as an advertizing method esp. if Adobe were to require product activation ala Microsoft. (Piracy blocks competition.)
Re:Uh? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Uh? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Uh? (Score:2)
Re:Not sure this will lower piracy (Score:2)
Uhm.. sounds like Adobe has abandoned the goal of stoping or even slowing down piracy in Asia.. all they are saying is "We will no longer fund the development of Asian language applications, because you guys just pirate them anyways".. they could care less if their stuff is pirated after they leave.. it's not their market anymore.. they aren't taking financial hits to make software that doesn't get purchased..
Re:I wonder what effect... (Score:2)
For Photoshop maybe, but for some other products (InDesign etc) the support for localized versions has to go beyond just translating the menu texts and help files.
In many cases support for multi-byte character sets needs additional work (since apps were developed before standards like Unicode); the text flow may go from right to left (and/or from down to up), and the input methods may be platform dependant.
That is, english version might not have all the required feature for even inputting stuff, and will be useless. For some software this is not an issue, for many it is.
Re:I wonder what effect... (Score:2)
I think in all seriousness it'd be cheaper for people in Asian markets to just learn english than pay $600.
Re:I wonder what effect... (Score:2)
> I am under the impression that English-language versions will just be pirated instead of the localized Chinese/Korean/whatever versions.
And this impacts Adobe's bottom line... how?
Frankly, I think Adobe's doing the right thing here -- if sales don't justify the cost of porting/localizing, don't port/localize.
Adobe's recognized that they don't have the right to force people to buy their products -- they've merely stated that, in response, nobody has the right to force Adobe to write the products in the first place.
If you want Asian-language Adobe products, support those who create them by purchasing them. I applaud Adobe for being honest enough to pick up its bat and ball and go home.
Contrast that with RIAA's hining about how "If we allow people to copy Titney Spheres CDs, she won't make any more music" -- I dare Hilary Rosen to make good on that threat.
(Of course, every time I turn on the radio, I pray Ms. Rosen makes good on that threat ;-)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
If they have to spend $750,000 to develop a Chinese language version of Photoshop, which only sells a thousand legitimate copies (at $600/each), they've just lost money. They'd be better off putting their $750,000 in a savings account (except maybe a BofA savings account, which would charge them a $300K "We gotta count your money" fee) and selling only a hundred copies of their English language version in China.
What's tougher to determine is if, by not creating a Chinese version, they're hurting themselves in the long-term. Let's say they don't develop a Chinese version of Photoshop. Somebody like JASC could develop a Chinese version of Paint Shop Pro and gain a large following in China. Then, if we assume that at some point in the future, the Chinese market is profitable, Adobe might be in trouble. Everybody in China will be used to using Paint Shop Pro, and might not bother swapping over to Photoshop.
It's a question of determining when it'll be profitable to spend money developing Chinese language versions of software, and deciding just how much the Chinese care about getting a native language version of their software.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:C'mon... (Score:2)
Re:Proprietary formats should die, anyway (Score:2)
Re:Proprietary formats should die, anyway (Score:2)
The only problem with this argument is that .pdf isn't a proprietary format. It's true that most people who use it read and write .pdf using Adobe's products, but they are not by any means the only programs out there that use .pdf. On my Linux box, for instance, I read .pdf using xpdf and write it by printing to a .ps file and using ps2pdf. IIRC, OSX now uses display pdf, so it has pdf creation and interpreting abilities built in to the core of the OS. This is possible precisely because .pdf is not a proprietary format. It's well enough defined that other programmers can create software that reads and writes it perfectly.
Parent article is insane (Score:5, Insightful)
I have written web based programs that generate PDF without using any Adobe code. (When you need to be in control of the exact layout and 75dpi is not good enough, it is a great choice.)
TeX is happy to make PDF files. My Mac is happy to write anything I wish out as a PDF file instead of printing. In linux I have a little program to convert postscript to pdf. No Adobe software required on those systems.
I do tend to use Acrobat Reader for reading them, but I also use xpdf (launches much faster under linux) and, under OS X, Preview to read them.
I don't even understand that part about scanned documents and
It is possible that there is another format that provides precise display at high resolution in an easily navigable, on demand downloadable format, but I haven't heard of it. Long live PDF.