On the surface, Apple’s announcement on Tuesday of a subscription service called Apple Creator Studio does not demand a whole lot of explanation or analysis. The Mac/iPad/iPhone offering, which bundles the Final Cut Pro video editor, Logic Pro audio editor, Pixelmator Pro image editor, and other apps for making and manipulating media for $13 a month or $129 a year, is exactly the sort of thing you’d expect the company to get around to introducing.
After all, its strategy of expanding the portion of its revenue that comes from services has already resulted in offerings such as Apple TV, Apple Music, Apple Arcade, and Apple News+. It would have been weird if Apple hadn’t pushed its creativity apps in a service-y direction—a process that began a couple of years ago when the first iPad versions of Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro carried subscription pricing.
But Creator Studio, which arrives in the App Store on January 28, also ties together several other ongoing plot lines relating to Apple’s business. Its very existence helps answer questions about how the company sees AI as a creative tool. The company has the opportunity to address others as it builds out the product in the coming years. I spoke with Apple’s VP of Worldwide Product Marketing Bob Borchers, and senior director of Worldwide Product Marketing Brent Chiu-Watson, about the new service—starting with the fundamental question of what sort of people they envision using it.

Apple’s history in creativity software is long: For example, Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro both date to the previous century. Yet at times, it hasn’t been entirely clear whether the company saw the customer base for such tools as consisting literally of professionals, prosumers who’d outgrown products such as iMovie and GarageBand, or some combination thereof. Even now, Creator Studio does not add up to a full-blooded rival to Adobe’s Creative Cloud, which offers many more apps in various editions at much higher prices, up to $70 a month for the full shebang.
Still, Borchers offered me a reasonably crisp definition of Creator Studio’s intended audience: creators who, increasingly, do a little bit of everything. “A musician isn’t just songwriting,” he told me. “They’re producing the tracks, they’re creating album artwork, they’re editing music videos, they’re designing merch. They’re doing all of those things, and they’re inherently working across some of those traditional boundaries.”
With that in mind, Apple is spreading useful functionality between Creator Studio’s apps in ways that share the wealth and reduce the learning curve. For example, Pixelmator Pro—a much-loved indie app whose developer Apple acquired last year—already had AI-infused features that can intelligently auto-crop images and scale them up without losing detail. Now, Creator Studio subscribers will find the same tools in Keynote, Pages, and Numbers. Similarly, Logic Pro’s Beat Detection feature, which uses AI to visualize an audio track’s tempo, will be available in Final Cut Pro as well, where it will help creators edit video to stay in sync with what audiences hear.

The more features that show up in multiple apps, the more Creator Studio should feel like a coherent suite with a unified personality. “That sort of consistency, we think, is really, really valuable, and we’re going to find more connection points over time,” says Chiu-Watson.
It’s no shock that the new features Creator Studio is launching with are largely about AI-based assistance. Some run on-device and use Apple’s own technology, including visual and audio search options that can find media such as a track with “funky upbeat drum.” Others draw on OpenAI cloud-based models, like image-generation options that go beyond Apple Intelligence’s Image Playgrounds, as well as Keynote’s newfound ability to turn text outlines into presentations and write speaker notes for slides. (Google’s Gemini LLM plays no role in Creator Studio, though given the new Apple-Google AI partnership announced on Monday, it’s tough to imagine that will stay true forever.)

Apple—which is still an underdog in AI but has learned to be sensitive about suggesting that it’s trying to automate deeply human tasks—is taking pains to emphasize that it’s not trying to turn content creation over to algorithms. Nor is it (or OpenAI) training models on the media people produce in Creator Studio.
“The key thing is, we’re doing this with the philosophy that AI should amplify one’s ideas and not replace any piece of human artistry or creativity,” says Chiu-Watson. “We’re just trying to make someone more efficient as they explore their process.”
As someone who’s used an iPad as my primary work computer for almost 15 years, I am heartened by the fact that Creator Studio represents the iPad debut of Pixelmator Pro. The app supports drawing with pressure-sensitive art materials via the Pencil stylus, and is particularly welcome given that Adobe’s iPad version of Photoshop remains a dim echo of the desktop version. (Pixelmator’s sister app Photomator—a rough counterpart to Apple’s Lightroom, and an essential part of my own iPad toolkit—is not part of the new suite, and remains available via standalone subscription.)
For years, the iPad Pro’s powerful hardware has felt like it’s sprinted well ahead of most of the apps it runs. Creator Studio won’t change that overnight. But it does give Apple new incentive to beef up its own iPad software—a boon in itself and, with any luck, a good example for other developers. “Our guiding principle here is we wanted to put the most powerful tools in the hands of our creative community wherever they are,” says Borchers.

The price of progress
It must be acknowledged that the shift in business model reflected in Creator Studio’s bundling of apps for a monthly or yearly fee—rather than a one-time price—is not going to be universally hailed. Just ask Adobe, whose Creative Cloud has managed to disaffect a meaningful percentage of creative types who want nothing to do with subscription plans. (Some of those users have gravitated to apps from Affinity, whose new owner Canva recently crammed photo editing, vector illustration, and page layout into one free product.)
To be fair, Apple has gone to some length to allay such concerns, at least for the moment. All Mac apps in Creator Studio will remain available as one-time purchases in the App Store. The company is also grandfathering in users who had standalone subscriptions to the iPad versions of Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro and prefer to keep them, though some content may be exclusive to the Creator Studio versions. Until now, the only version of Pixelmator available for the iPad has been a basic, non-Pro edition; Apple says it won’t get any more updates, but will remain functional.
Apple fans with long memories may remember the long-ago days when Apple packaged Keynote, Numbers, and Pages into a $79 Microsoft Office alternative called iWork. More recently, it’s shipped them gratis on every new device. Only paying customers will get the new AI features that turn these apps—and the Freeform whiteboarding tool—into sort of honorary members of the Creator Studio portfolio. But Chiu-Watson told me that the free versions aren’t turning into dead ends or demoware. Indeed, they’ll continue to get upgrades of their own. “Some premium features and premium content are only for subscribers, but that’s just a choice,” he says. “You can opt in, [but] there’s no necessity to do so.”
In the end, Creator Studio, like any software experience, will speak for itself, in large part through how it evolves over time. Having assembled its disparate elements and given them an initial round of updates, Apple has the opportunity to keep the momentum going through ongoing improvements that make the price feel like money well invested. As Chiu-Watson puts it, “We hope people pay attention, because it’s one thing what we say. It’s another how we exemplify it.”
source https://www.fastcompany.com/91474228/apple-creator-studio
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