Open source not right for everything: Adobe exec

Adobe has knocked open-source creative tools with executive John Loiacono claiming open-source software is not right for everything or everyone.

While Adobe has embraced open-source for some products, it looks like its Creative Suite portfolio will remain proprietary.

In a blog posting on Sunday, Loiacono, the company's top creative products executive made unflattering remarks about open-source creative software.

"Time is money," he said, linking to a blog by commentator Eric Vreeland, who observed: "Debugging recent installs of certain open-source software has wasted immense amounts of my spare time; charged at my hourly rate these hours represent a pile of cash bigger than that which full list-price versions of comparable commercial software would require for purchase."

In the US, Vreeland opted for the US$2,500 Creative Suite Master Collection, which bundles 12 Adobe products, such as Photoshop, Premiere and Illustrator.

Loiacono points to his open-source credentials as the top Sun software executive who oversaw much of that company's work releasing its Solaris operating system as open-source software.

"Obviously, I have thought about whether open source has a place in Adobe's creative products strategy. But what designers need is tightly integrated workflows and high reliability right out of the box, so the really important question to ask is: What's the impact to the user?" Loiacono said.

"Open-source software can be a perfect solution. It's just not right for everything or for everyone -- like many creative professionals who are on deadline and prefer to innovate versus integrate."

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