One thing I REALLY hate, is that you can't simply alt- hit your pen on your tablet to select a color for the paintbrush.you have to actually drag it a bit to select the color. I find it frustrating the lack of documentation and video tuts that show many of the things I commonly did with PS. I came from Photoshop and the concepts are all there, just the keyboard short cuts and some ways of doing "common" PS things are done a bit different. I love Affinity Photo on the desktop too. I have to imagine it will do amazing stuff on the new M1 iPad. (focus stacking about 20 RAW images from a 5D3 on Affinity Photo on an iPad Pro 10.5" 2017 model.took only a minute or two.no crashing, and did quite a good job!! I got all 3 for desktop and also got the iPad versions which are amazing what they can do even on a 2017 iPad Pro!!!!! Hard to beat at that price, $25 each for Affinity Photo, Designer and Publisher. I believe all of the Affinity products are still on sale.$25 each. Working in combination with DXO or C1 and tiff output works well for me anyway for the ace noise reduction. There has been rumours for ages about this but for now nothing. Also there is no cataloguing feature which for me goes hand in hand with raw development. The downside, forget the raw development module, sadly and frankly they just got it so wrong it could have been genius but i suspect that project file sizes would have been an issue, ah well perhaps that will be the big thing in v2. Key things for me, everything can be done on adjustments (non destructive) so i cant think of when I've ever had to do anything that i couldn't reverse. Because it's new(ish) the codebase is modern (and clean). Remember that its actually a suit of apps that fully integrate with each other with a common project format, a lot of graphics artists are using/moving to it. It's easy to learn especially for photographers that really only need a subset of the functionality. I do a lot of panos and stitching with it and am rarely dissapointed with results. I would not bet on it when reading the FAQ.ĮDIT: I find the Universal License to be a very generous one: one user, no matter how many devices this user owns on all platforms - and others are free to use the apps on those devices (non-commercial).Been using it for years now. I am also not sure, if a regular license (limited to one OS) is using Apple’s Family Sharing. If your Apple Family is allowed or able to use your Affinity account on their devices is a question I am neither qualified nor comfortable to answer. Your Apple Family is allowed to use those apps on your devices. So, I guess that this license technically will not use Apple’s Family Sharing. It is your Affinity account - which is necessary for the universal license (it works on PCs, too). I think this means that the Apple-ID itself is not the key for the Universal license. It is working across platforms, even on PCs. The universal license is being handled by Serif/Affinity. However, only you are allowed to use the apps for commercial use-if any members of your household need to make commercial use of the apps as well they will need to purchase their own license. Other people (for example, members of your household) are also allowed to use the apps on those devices. As a private individual you can install Affinity apps on as many devices as you own which run the operating system you have purchased a license for (of course in the case of a Universal License that means you can install on any iPads, Macs or Windows PCs you own).
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