
As such, there were “mismatches” that needed to be reconciled by both Apple and application developers after MacOS 10.15 was officially released.

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There were even changes between what was released and what was sent to developers such as Adobe a week to a few days earlier. Adobe Acrobat DC Pro v2.001.20112 Pre-Cracked (macOS) Adobe Acrobat DC with Adobe Document Cloud services is here. There were very many additional significant changes before MacOS 10.15 was actually released to the customer. My guess is that Adobe started testing their apps, but just failed to test their installers before the public release, when customers started running into this problem.Īlthough Apple had so-called “beta releases” of MacOS 10.15 last June, the fact is that the June release was nowhere near what the final MacOS 10.15 ended up being. I would not characterize that as "last minute", and should have been plenty of time for Adobe to test their installers and their apps against the new version. Apple released macOS Catalina in beta form to developers on June 3, 2019, a full four months before it was released to the public on October 7, 2019. Major OS changes are supposed to be released in advance to all software partners and developers, way in advance of the OS's release so that programs can be adjusted.Īpple traditionally waits until the last minute to notify its partners like Adobe.Īpple's Catalina OS was released less than a week ago and I'm surprised Adobe got out an Acrobat fix in such a short time responded: A large part of the problem is Apple, not Adobe.
