

The newer Lightroom, which stores photos in the cloud, is more appropriate for a world where you might be taking photos with your phone's Lightroom app one day, editing them on your iPad or Mac the next, then showing them with the Lightroom web app the day after that. "We can't go into specifics, but it is related to sandboxing and how Lightroom and Lightroom Classic differ in approaching photo organization." Sandboxing is a security precaution that reins in potentially badly behaving apps, but it also limits the power of legitimate apps.

"Lightroom is better suited architecturally to operate within the structure of the Mac App Store," Mangalick said of Lightroom Classic's absence. For now at least, the newer Lightroom, until recently called Lightroom CC, is the only option.Īdobe's Lightroom software, now available in the Mac App Store, is designed for editing and cataloging photos and costs $10 per month. One app that isn't available through the Mac App Store, though, is Adobe's Lightroom Classic, a version with a longer lineage and a richer feature set. If you want to cancel, you have to do so at least 24 hours before the beginning of a new monthly billing cycle. "Once your free trial ends, the recurring monthly payment is automatically charged to your iTunes account," Adobe says on the Lightroom Mac App Store listing. Apple scored one notable victory when Microsoft released Office 365 on the Mac App Store in January.Īdobe offers Lightroom in the Mac App Store with a seven-day free trial. Plenty of software is available through the Mac App Store, though, which can be familiar to iPhone users, bring buyers some assurances that software can be trusted, and offer sellers benefits when it comes to software discovery, distribution and payments. By bypassing the Mac App Store, developers can sidestep some security-minded restrictions, Apple approval processes and the 30% fee Apple charges. But on Macs, you can also download apps directly from the software maker.

On iPhones and iPads, the App Store is the only way you can download software, and plenty of Adobe apps are available there. "We've been working closely with Apple to bring Lightroom to leverage the new MAS."

"With the redesign of the Mac App Store, it was the perfect time to set this in motion and make Lightroom the first Adobe app to be available on the MAS," Sharad Mangalick, Lightroom principal product manager, said in a statement. The photo-editing and cataloging software, geared for photo enthusiasts and pros who want something richer than Google Photos or Apple Photos, costs the same as outside the Mac App Store: $10 per month, including the software and 1TB of online storage. The Mac App Store has received significant criticism, but Apple's efforts to improve it apparently have paid off, as Adobe started using the store to sell its Lightroom software for the first time on Thursday.
