![]() ![]() For most people not using Adobe software ASE is not that useful, because their software doesn't support it. If your app would work on Mac, Windows, and Linux desktop as well as iOS and Android, I think it might be more useful - but only if it also converts ASE files to other colour palette file formats, and from other apps to ASE.Īs it stands, the market seems awfully small. The question is whether your app solves a hidden need - and I think that might be questionable. Why pay for an iPhone app when you already have paid for all the Adobe tools that do the same thing integrated in those Adobe apps?Īnd users who do not use Adobe software probably have no interest in a paid-for ASE editor that is available only on mobile devices, because their apps probably cannot import ASE files, and they will opt for something like the apps I listed: a quick conversion to a different palette format with a free desktop app. I think what he means is that ASE is an interchange format primarily used by Adobe users, and since Adobe users are already paying the rent for all the Adobe apps, and use those apps to create, edit, and exchange ASE colour palettes, the question is how relevant your app would be. Really thank you for your time and for the idea with brushes - I will look at it but not promise. At least I must see success or failure of the current project. I don't understand, USD50 - it is from where? Version for the iPad makes sense, it is right and it is a future, but for macOS - I am not sure. >I think $6 is too much money when an app offers me absolutely nothing I don't already have and pay $50+ a month for and doesn't even work on the platform I use (the Mac). It is simple, cheaper and it is also is a standard way of the exchange. Outside of it user's can use my app and ASE. >Fact: Adobe also has multiple apps for iOS that do the same thing as your app, but sync it automatically with Adobe CC apps you have installed on your computer-thereby bypassing the need to even deal with ASE files. >Fact: Because designers who want/need the colors in ASE format are already using Adobe apps, everything your app does is already built-in to the applications on the computer. With my app you can open downloads folder on your iPhone and see or edit files downloaded from the Adobe Color. >fact: With Adobe Color you can see thumbnails of the colors because it doesn't use the ASE format unless. Export or import - maybe, but not to edit. My app is quite unique, I don't know any ASE editors on iOS, macOS or win platform, free or paid. Why not? Specific of the app - you can find color schema outside of the home, open ase from iCloud and share with your team for seconds. (which few designers use to do their work). >You're charging $6 for an app for the iPhone. It no longer works in macOS Catalina and the developer has disappeared.īuild a modern version of that app with the ability to also preview PS pattern files and the ASE files along with the brush files and you can probably make a pretty decent amount if marketed correctly. I used to have an app called BrushPilot that would allow me to "catalog" the brush files and show me little previews of each brush in the file. As a designer, I collect crap-loads of Photoshop Brush files. ![]() Make a macOS version of this app, and add a unique feature or two and you can probably charge $15-$20. I think $6 is too much money when an app offers me absolutely nothing I don't already have and pay $50+ a month for and doesn't even work on the platform I use (the Mac). And no, I don't think $6 for a useful app is too much money. Look, as I said in my original response, I applaud your effort. ![]() THING.įact: Adobe also has multiple apps for iOS that do the same thing as your app, but sync it automatically with Adobe CC apps you have installed on your computer-thereby bypassing the need to even deal with ASE files. They do this because they know there is little reason to have a file in ASE format to begin with, other than backup/transfer purposes where a file name is enough of an indicator of what the file is.įact: Because designers who want/need the colors in ASE format are already using Adobe apps, everything your app does is already built-in to the applications on the computer that they're already paying for and using. And while most of them (I suspect almost all of them, actually) have an iPhone, it's just not used as an extension of their workflow (it's more of a supplemental thing).įact: With Adobe Color you can see thumbnails of the colors because it doesn't use the ASE format unless you want to transfer the ASE document (or save it for backup). ![]() Fact: The overwhelming majority of professional designers work on a desktop/laptop computer, not a phone, or even an iPad. ![]()
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