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Today — 6 September 2025Main stream

A brief history of Adobe’s apps

By: hoakley
6 September 2025 at 15:00

Few other companies have had as much influence on the Mac and its success as Adobe. Founded just over a year before Apple launched the Mac, its original mission was to develop and market its new PostScript page description language, originally designed and written by Adobe’s co-founders, John Warnock (1940-2023) and Charles Geschke (1939-2021). Steve Jobs (1955-2011) was an early enthusiast who shared their vision. After an unsuccessful bid to buy Adobe, Apple bought a 19% stake in it and paid in advance for a five-year licence for PostScript. When Apple introduced its first PostScript laser printer, the LaserWriter, in March 1985 the partnership launched the Desktop Publishing (DTP) revolution.

Adobe Illustrator (1987)

The same year the LaserWriter brought PostScript and its fonts to the first DTP designers, Adobe started development of its first retail software product, Illustrator, released two years later in 1987. This is a vector graphics editor aimed initially at creating in Encapsulated PostScript Format (EPSF), so had to render the bézier curves of PostScript into the Mac’s QuickDraw graphics.

Illustrator wasn’t offered for Windows for another two years, and even then was widely criticised for lagging behind its Mac version. It wasn’t until 1997 that the Windows version achieved parity. Adobe’s major competitor, Aldus FreeHand, was preferred by many professionals until Adobe bought Macromedia in 2005, following which it was quietly suffocated.

This is Adobe Illustrator running in Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar in early 2003.

Adobe Photoshop (1990)

In 1988, Adobe bought the distribution licence to a raster graphics editor already named Photoshop by its original developers, brothers Thomas and John Knoll. The first Adobe version was released for Macs only in February 1990. It has the distinction of being the major app developed using Apple’s MacApp class library, and wasn’t released for Windows until late 1992, by which time it was establishing itself as the standard, particularly for pro photographers. In 2007 it was joined by Adobe Photoshop Lightroom, an image management app that became the standard when Apple discontinued Aperture in 2015.

This is Adobe Photoshop in Mac OS 9.2, in late 2002.

And this is its matching Mac OS X version in 10.2 Jaguar.

Adobe Premiere (1991)

Digital non-linear video editing was in its infancy in 1991, when SuperMac Technology developed a QuickTime-based app to support its Video Spigot capture card. Adobe purchased the whole project, and four months later at the end of 1991 released the first version of Adobe Premiere. Although severely constrained by hardware of the time, it proved another successful Mac-only product until its Windows version was released almost two years later, and the product was renamed Adobe Premiere Pro in 2003.

In 1995, Premiere was joined by After Effects following Adobe’s acquisition of Aldus the previous year. After Effects provides digital effects including motion graphics and compositing. In 1999, Apple released Final Cut Pro, whose early development had been by the first Premiere development team working for Macromedia, and has since added Motion and other apps to form its Pro suite. They successfully competed against Adobe’s video products on the Mac.

PDF and Adobe Acrobat (1993)

I have already given a fuller account of the history of PDF and Adobe Acrobat on Macs.

This is Acrobat Distiller 4.0 running on Mac OS 9.1 in early 2001, showing some of its bewildering array of options for turning PostScript files into PDF.

Adobe provided its free Acrobat Reader for Mac OS X, here seen in 10.0 Cheetah.

Adobe FrameMaker (1995)

FrameMaker, originally developed by Frame Technology, is a high-end technical publishing system bought by Adobe in 1995. It was then offered in a premium version with extensive support for SGML, seen here in 2002, two years before Adobe dropped this Mac version.

Adobe PageMaker (1995-2001)

From its launch in 1985, the leading page layout app for Macs had been Aldus PageMaker, which Adobe acquired when it purchased Aldus in 1994. By this time, PageMaker was under increasing pressure from QuarkXPress, which had become preferred by many professionals. As a result, Aldus had already started to develop what it claimed would be its “Quark killer”, and Adobe continued that. It then discontinued support for PageMaker in a final version released in 2001, which notoriously didn’t support Mac OS X and was never ported to Intel Macs either.

Adobe InDesign (1999)

Early development on what was to become Adobe InDesign had started in Aldus before it was swallowed up by Adobe, and its first version was released in 1999, for both Windows and Mac OS. When Mac OS 10.0 Cheetah was released in March 2001, InDesign was its first native page layout app, as well as the first to support Unicode and advanced features of OpenType fonts. As QuarkXPress entered a decline, InDesign became the DTP product of choice.

This is Adobe InDesign in its early days, seen here editing Christmas cards in Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar in December 2002.

Adobe Dreamweaver (2005)

Dreamweaver is a website development app that originated in Macromedia in 1997, and was acquired by Adobe with its purchase of that company in 2005.

Adobe Dreamweaver is seen here running in Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard in August 2009.

Flash (2005-2020)

Another of Macromedia’s products that Adobe acquired in 2005 was Flash, a rich multimedia software platform that became enormously popular in websites including YouTube and many corporate sites. Flash came with its own scripting language ActionScript, but proved a security nightmare because of its long series of exploited vulnerabilities. Although Flash Player was almost universal on Macs, Apple refused to allow Flash support on its devices, leading to a bitter standoff between Steve Jobs and Adobe. About a year later, much to the relief of security staff around the world, Adobe announced it would cease Flash development; it was deprecated in 2017, and all support stopped at the end of 2020.

‘Shockwave Flash’ and the Flash Player plagued Mac OS X Tiger in 2006.

Others

There have been and still are many other apps from Adobe. One of my favourites was LaserTalk, first released by Emerald City Software in 1988. This was a PostScript debugger acquired by Adobe and bundled in its PostScript SDK. Finally, there was Adobe Streamline, a tool for converting bitmap graphics into Adobe Illustrator vector graphics, first released in 1989, and absorbed into Illustrator in about 2001. No doubt you will also have your own favourites.

Apple sold its 19% stake in Adobe in 1989, and in 2011 Adobe introduced its Creative Cloud subscription service, that two years later replaced its popular Creative Studio DVD distributions with perpetual licences.

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