Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Tablets
  3. Apple
  4. Mobile
  5. Photography
  6. News

Affinity teases its impressive Photoshop competitor running on a 12.9-inch iPad Pro

Add as a preferred source on Google

Adobe appears to have a chokehold on the creative software market. But, as history has proven, all giants must fall and there are plenty of other, smaller companies looking to take their piece of the pie as the inevitable happens.

One such company is Affinity, a small studio that has already made its mark on the industry with a suite of creative desktop applications. At the moment, Affinity offers three individual programs, each of which align perfectly with an Adobe equivalent.

Recommended Videos

They are Affinity Photo, Affinity Designer and Affinity Publisher, which are Affinity’s take on Adobe’s Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign, respectively.

Already, Affinity has gained an impressive following with its simple interface and focused collection of features. But this is only the beginning.

Today, Affinity showed off a teaser of its Photoshop competitor, running on an iPad Pro. Designed and developed from the ground up to operate on the mobile operating system iOS, Affinity Photo for iPad looks to offer up an impressive feature set in a compact package.

The sneak peek is both short and jumpy, but in the two-minute preview, we catch a glimpse of just how powerful the program already is. It’s hard to see everything Affinity has included, but the video says every feature available on the desktop app will be included in the iPad equivalent — something that can’t be said about Adobe’s Lightroom apps.

From basic photo adjustments to Content Aware-like tools using the Apple Pen, the app appears to run smooth as butter on Apple’s 12.9-inch iPad Pro.

To showcase this, the video shows a user panning and zooming through a 385-megapixel photograph captured in 16-bit sRGB — all while running at a steady 60 frames per second.

Also demoed in the video is the ability to edit full 32-bit HDR photos, such as OpenEXR and Radiance (.hdr) files, as well as 360-degree photos — features not yet seen in other post-production programs, especially those on mobile devices.

Overall, it looks like Affinity has been spending its time wisely. Combine Affinity Photo for iPad with iOS 10’s RAW photo support, and you have one heck of a mobile editing platform. It’ll be interesting to see when this app drops and how it performs when it does.

One things for sure, though — Adobe better watch its back, because Affinity is hot on its tail.

Gannon Burgett
Former Editor
Apple could launch two new Apple Pencils next spring alongside the iPad Pro
Bloomberg reports that two refreshed styluses are planned for next spring's iPad Pro launch
Apple Pencil featured

Apple's next iPad Pro refresh might not be the only hardware getting an upgrade. According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple is preparing two new Apple Pencil models for launch next spring. The lineup is said to include a refreshed Apple Pencil Pro alongside an updated version of the more affordable USB-C Apple Pencil, with both expected to debut alongside the next-generation iPad Pro.

A refresh for both ends of the lineup

Read more
DuRoBo’s Krono e-reader and it’s page-turning sidekick Moodi are now available globally
DuRoBo launches its Smart Dial ePaper reader and a tiny page-turning remote worldwide
durobo-krono-moodi

Dutch ePaper company DuRoBo just made two of its products available to buy in the US and UK. The Krono, a 6.13-inch ePaper focus hub designed for distraction-free reading, thinking, and writing, is now on Amazon for $279.99.

Alongside it, DuRoBo has launched Moodi, a lightweight Bluetooth page-turning remote, for $30.99 on Amazon and the DuRoBo website. If you have been watching the e-ink device market grow, this duo is worth a close look.

Read more
Amazon quietly upgrades its Fire HD 10 tablet with a whopping 1GB of RAM
Amazon really said, "Here's 1GB. You're welcome."
Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet

Amazon has quietly refreshed one of its most popular tablets, but not in the way many expected. Instead of launching a brand-new Fire tablet after its longest product drought in years, the company has introduced a slightly upgraded version of the existing Fire HD 10 with an extra gigabyte of RAM.

The update is modest on paper, yet it arrives at an interesting time. Amazon hasn't introduced a new Fire tablet since the Fire HD 8 refresh in 2024, while products like the Fire 7 and Fire Max 11 have yet to receive successors. Rather than expanding its lineup, Amazon appears to be extending the life of an aging device with a minor hardware tweak.

Read more