Adobe has reversed their decision to shut down Animate as fans became furious Yesterday, news that Adobe Animate was shutting down shocked the creative community, swiftly inciting uproar. Now, barely ...
Adobe Animate’s demise has been recanted after the company caved in to an avalanche of complaints over its decision to discontinue their popular 2D animation software. In a surprise turn of events, ...
Two days ago, Adobe announced plans to discontinue its legacy 2D animation software, Animate, and is likely to focus on its AI platform, Firefly, and its generative video capabilities. However, in the ...
UPDATE: Following social media backlash over plans to shut down its 2D animation software Animate, Adobe has reversed course and decided to keep the service running. Instead of a complete shutdown, ...
Adobe reverses decision to discontinue Animate after significant user backlash. Animate will remain available with no planned end date for users. Adobe commits to providing security updates but will ...
Adobe has decided not to go ahead with its plan to discontinue Adobe Animate on March 1. The company confirmed the change in an FAQ, stating that Animate will now only be in maintenance mode. It said ...
Less than a day after triggering widespread backlash with its announcement to discontinue Adobe Animate (formerly known as Flash), Adobe has walked back key elements of its announcement, clarifying ...
Adobe plans to shut down Adobe Animate, a 2D animation software used to create vector-based animations for websites, games, and cartoons. As of March 1, the company will stop accepting new sign-ups.
Adobe Animate is now in maintenance mode, which means it will no longer get new features Senior Director apologizes for previous message which caused "confusion and angst" Unlike yesterday's report, ...
Adobe has reversed course on its plans for Adobe Animate, confirming that the long-running 2D animation application will not be shut down after all. Image: Adobe Stock Good news. People have the power ...
It won’t get new features, but it will still be available. It won’t get new features, but it will still be available. is a senior reporter covering technology, gaming, and more. He joined The Verge in ...