![]() ![]() With this release, Adobe says that Lightroom is now available across all the major desktop (Mac, Win, Intel, ARM), mobile (iOS, Android), and web () platforms. And, yes it plans to continue to invest in and improve Lightroom on Intel-based systems, too, of course. Adobe notes that it will continue to optimize for WOA and M1 in subsequent releases. Native support is promised by Adobe in 2020. ![]() Apple M1 processor: Lightroom Desktop 4.0 (cloud service) is not officially supported running under Rosetta 2 emulation mode. In the M1-supported version of Lightroom, it took the MacBook 6.4 seconds to import 100 raw images, edging out the PCs time of 7.1 seconds to complete the same task. Earlier versions are not supported by Adobe. That said, there’s still work to be done. Lightroom Desktop 4.0 (cloud service) is compatible with macOS Big Sur. ![]() Instead, it looks like Lightroom is generally available on both ARM-based platforms. The arrival of Adobe Lightroom on M1 Macs and WOA follows last month’s release of a Photoshop Beta on these platforms. ![]() “We rebuilt Lightroom to take advantage of the newest performance and power efficiency benefits of the Apple M1 and Qualcomm Snapdragon (for Windows 10) processors.” “The latest version of Adobe Lightroom is now a native app for both Apple M1 and Windows Arm platforms,” Adobe’s Sharad Mangalick announced. Adobe announced today that it has released Lightroom as a native app on M1-based Macs and Windows 10 on ARM (WOA). ![]()
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