That doesn’t mean it can’t be done there are competitors who are achieving some (but in no cases all) of those things on iPad. It all has to be redone, or, Apple has to allow macOS to be installed on Apple Silicon iPads so that we can use Lightroom Classic as it is already, as long as a mouse and keyboard are attached to the iPad. (iOS apps tend to use device-independent cloud-synced storage for ease of cross-device editing, as the current iOS Lightroom app does.) You can’t have lots of those tiny little Lightroom Classic buttons on a touchscreen, unless you require that a mouse/stylus be used. ![]() User-controlled referenced file paths on local storage are the foundation for file management in Lightroom Classic (and InDesign, Premiere Pro, etc…), but those are very rarely used by other apps on iOS. For example, you can’t have soft-proofing or color-managed printing if iPad OS doesn’t let you install ICC profiles. This thread is specifically about bringing Lightroom Classic to the iPad Pro, and from that point of view, many of its features are simply not straightforward to implement within the way iOS works. ![]() The iPad Pro hardware is capable of so much more than the OS and applications currently allow, but the problem is not that they named it Pro, the problem is in the nature of iPad OS itself as Apple has currently designed it. No matter what apps we use, we can spend as much or more on an iPad Pro and useful accessories (keyboard, mouse/trackpad) compared to a similiarly configured Mac laptop, but still not match what the laptop can do. Today, even the M1/M2 13" MacBook “Pro” is so limited that in most cases it isn’t any better than the Air, and no match for the 14/16" MacBook Pro. ![]() In the Intel years, they called it “Pro” even though you could never order discrete graphics or more than 16GB RAM for it. The more current and long-running example is the 13" MacBook Pro. They called it “Pro,” but in many ways it fell short of what a pro desktop should do. It’s useful to not read too much into when Apple names something “Pro.” Traditionally, “Pro” at Apple has simply meant “a level we will price higher, regardless of whether it’s actually better.” One example would be the 2013 Mac Pro, the black cylinder. You might also find the forum dedicated to the Lightroom ecosystem (Cloud-based) a more productive location to share your thoughts. Re Photomerge for Pano and HDR, you should add your request to. Some people like mobile, some don't, but much of what it can and can't do is as a result of restrictions imposed by Apple along with design decisions based on the experience the engineering and product teams gained from LrC user issues. I expect that this will continue, at least as much as it's possible to do so when how we interact with the mobile apps is taken into consideration. Lightroom for the iPad, iPhone and Android devices was and likely never will be an alternative to Lightroom Classic. To date, the mobile apps have largely followed the feature set, workflow, etc of Lightroom Desktop. If Adobe tried to make Lightroom Classic for iPad OS today, under the limitations of iPad OS and the constraints of a touch UX, it would probably look and work at lot like the existing ground-up rewrite of Lightroom for iPad that they already did. But that seems very unlikely for now, largely because of the ways that iPad OS does not support everything that macOS does. What’s left, is to wonder how likely it is that Adobe would completely rewrite Lightroom Classic for iPad OS. So we cannot expect, any time soon, to be able to run the Apple Silicon Mac version of Lightroom Classic on iPad OS without modification. All of the hopeful speculation for Mac software on M1 iPad Pro never came true. ![]() Lightroom Classic is now optimized for M1 Apple Silicon, but…in the many months since the M1 iPad Pro was released, Apple WWDC came and went, the release of iOS 15 came and went, and still, Apple has done nothing and announced nothing to make it possible to run Mac software on an M1 iPad Pro. Yes, and it is interesting to revisit this post months later.
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