Adobe Offers 50 Percent Discount For Final Cut Pro Users Who Switch To Premiere Pro


As you may have heard, Apple’s new version of its video editing software, Final Cut Pro X, has received considerable backlash from users. And as Jim Dalrymple reports, video editing rival Adobe has been welcoming these disheartened Final Cut Pro users with open arms. Now Adobe is taking it one step further, announcing a formal ‘switching program’ for any Final Cut Pro or Avid Media users.

Adobe says that anyone who has purchased any version of Apple Final Cut Pro or Avid Media Composer and want to switch to Adobe’s video tools (Production Premium or Premiere Pro) will be eligible for a 50 percent savings on Adobe Creative Suite CS5.5 Production Premium or Adobe Premiere Pro CS5.5.

Adobe has been pretty active in its marketing efforts towards disgruntled Final Cut Pro users. For example, the company has posted a number of ‘success stories’ of Premier Pro users who have made the switch.

Of course, not everyone hates the new version of Final Cut Pro, so it’s unclear how many ‘switchers’ Adobe will gain from the backlash. Also, check out Conan O’Brian weighing in on the Final Cut Pro X debacle.


Adobe Offers 50 Percent Discount For Final Cut Pro Users Who Switch To Premiere Pro


As you may have heard, Apple’s new version of its video editing software, Final Cut Pro X, has received considerable backlash from users. And as Jim Dalrymple reports, video editing rival Adobe has been welcoming these disheartened Final Cut Pro users with open arms. Now Adobe is taking it one step further, announcing a formal ‘switching program’ for any Final Cut Pro or Avid Media users.

Adobe says that anyone who has purchased any version of Apple Final Cut Pro or Avid Media Composer and want to switch to Adobe’s video tools (Production Premium or Premiere Pro) will be eligible for a 50 percent savings on Adobe Creative Suite CS5.5 Production Premium or Adobe Premiere Pro CS5.5.

Adobe has been pretty active in its marketing efforts towards disgruntled Final Cut Pro users. For example, the company has posted a number of ‘success stories’ of Premier Pro users who have made the switch.

Of course, not everyone hates the new version of Final Cut Pro, so it’s unclear how many ‘switchers’ Adobe will gain from the backlash. Also, check out Conan O’Brian weighing in on the Final Cut Pro X debacle.


Police warning over Orange march

Orange parade in GlasgowThe annual parade through Glasgow attracts thousands of marchers
Related Stories

Police and the Orange Order have warned people to leave the “booze and bigotry” behind, ahead of the Order’s annual march through Glasgow later.

About 8,000 people from 182 lodges are expected to take part in the parade.

The Order will deploy specially trained stewards to free up police officers to tackle any disorder, street drinking or sectarian behaviour.

Motorists, residents, businesses and shoppers have been warned to expect delays in and around the city centre.

The Order has also agreed to an earlier finish, at 1330 BST, to its traditional Glasgow Green rally at the end of the event.

This will mean the entire march is covered by one police shift.

Ch Supt Bernard Higgins who is in charge of policing the parade said his officers would take a “zero tolerance approach” to any disorder or sectarianism from those who follow the march.

He said: “Our priority is to make sure the parade is peacefully facilitated with the safety of those taking part, the general public and my officers being paramount.

“Don’t bring booze and don’t behave like a bigot or you could find yourself spending the rest of the weekend in a cell.”

Chf Supt Bernard Higgins Strathclyde Police

“We will not tolerate anti-sectarian behaviour of any kind. Commit sectarian offences and you will be arrested.

“Don’t bring alcohol as again my officers will seize it from you and you will be given a fixed penalty fine for public drinking. This kind of behaviour is totally unacceptable and only causes fear and alarm to innocent people enjoying time in the city centre.”

Strathclyde Police has worked closely with the Grand Orange Lodge and Glasgow City Council to agree a route for the march.

Ch Supt Higgins added: “Our message is by all means come to support the parade but don’t bring booze and don’t behave like a bigot or you could find yourself spending the rest of the weekend in a cell.”

Mr Henry Dunbar, Grand Master of the Orange Order, said: “I call upon every member of the Order to enjoy the day with the utmost decorum.

“I also have a message to our more boisterous supporters: you are welcome, but please enjoy the music, colour and excitement of the march responsibly – and leave the booze at home.”

People driving in and around the city centre while the march is taking place have been advised to leave extra time for their journey or consider alternative routes for the duration of the marches.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Ricoh Plans To Expand Camera Business, Buys Pentax Brand From Hoya

Camera brand Pentax will soon have a new owner: Tokyo-based Hoya group, which purchased the brand in 2007, is ready to sell [notice of sale as an English PDF] it to Ricoh in October this year. According to Japanese business daily The Nikkei, the office equipment maker plans to pay an estimated US$124 million for Pentax.

Read more…


Ricoh Plans To Expand Camera Business, Buys Pentax Brand From Hoya

Camera brand Pentax will soon have a new owner: Tokyo-based Hoya group, which purchased the brand in 2007, is ready to sell [notice of sale as an English PDF] it to Ricoh in October this year. According to Japanese business daily The Nikkei, the office equipment maker plans to pay an estimated US$124 million for Pentax.

Read more…


Police warning over Orange march

Orange parade in GlasgowThe annual parade through Glasgow attracts thousands of marchers
Related Stories

Police and the Orange Order have warned people to leave the “booze and bigotry” behind, ahead of the Order’s annual march through Glasgow later.

About 8,000 people from 182 lodges are expected to take part in the parade.

The Order will deploy specially trained stewards to free up police officers to tackle any disorder, street drinking or sectarian behaviour.

Motorists, residents, businesses and shoppers have been warned to expect delays in and around the city centre.

The Order has also agreed to an earlier finish, at 1330 BST, to its traditional Glasgow Green rally at the end of the event.

This will mean the entire march is covered by one police shift.

Ch Supt Bernard Higgins who is in charge of policing the parade said his officers would take a “zero tolerance approach” to any disorder or sectarianism from those who follow the march.

He said: “Our priority is to make sure the parade is peacefully facilitated with the safety of those taking part, the general public and my officers being paramount.

“Don’t bring booze and don’t behave like a bigot or you could find yourself spending the rest of the weekend in a cell.”

Chf Supt Bernard Higgins Strathclyde Police

“We will not tolerate anti-sectarian behaviour of any kind. Commit sectarian offences and you will be arrested.

“Don’t bring alcohol as again my officers will seize it from you and you will be given a fixed penalty fine for public drinking. This kind of behaviour is totally unacceptable and only causes fear and alarm to innocent people enjoying time in the city centre.”

Strathclyde Police has worked closely with the Grand Orange Lodge and Glasgow City Council to agree a route for the march.

Ch Supt Higgins added: “Our message is by all means come to support the parade but don’t bring booze and don’t behave like a bigot or you could find yourself spending the rest of the weekend in a cell.”

Mr Henry Dunbar, Grand Master of the Orange Order, said: “I call upon every member of the Order to enjoy the day with the utmost decorum.

“I also have a message to our more boisterous supporters: you are welcome, but please enjoy the music, colour and excitement of the march responsibly – and leave the booze at home.”

People driving in and around the city centre while the march is taking place have been advised to leave extra time for their journey or consider alternative routes for the duration of the marches.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Police warning over Orange march

Orange parade in GlasgowThe annual parade through Glasgow attracts thousands of marchers
Related Stories

Police and the Orange Order have warned people to leave the “booze and bigotry” behind, ahead of the Order’s annual march through Glasgow later.

About 8,000 people from 182 lodges are expected to take part in the parade.

The Order will deploy specially trained stewards to free up police officers to tackle any disorder, street drinking or sectarian behaviour.

Motorists, residents, businesses and shoppers have been warned to expect delays in and around the city centre.

The Order has also agreed to an earlier finish, at 1330 BST, to its traditional Glasgow Green rally at the end of the event.

This will mean the entire march is covered by one police shift.

Ch Supt Bernard Higgins who is in charge of policing the parade said his officers would take a “zero tolerance approach” to any disorder or sectarianism from those who follow the march.

He said: “Our priority is to make sure the parade is peacefully facilitated with the safety of those taking part, the general public and my officers being paramount.

“Don’t bring booze and don’t behave like a bigot or you could find yourself spending the rest of the weekend in a cell.”

Chf Supt Bernard Higgins Strathclyde Police

“We will not tolerate anti-sectarian behaviour of any kind. Commit sectarian offences and you will be arrested.

“Don’t bring alcohol as again my officers will seize it from you and you will be given a fixed penalty fine for public drinking. This kind of behaviour is totally unacceptable and only causes fear and alarm to innocent people enjoying time in the city centre.”

Strathclyde Police has worked closely with the Grand Orange Lodge and Glasgow City Council to agree a route for the march.

Ch Supt Higgins added: “Our message is by all means come to support the parade but don’t bring booze and don’t behave like a bigot or you could find yourself spending the rest of the weekend in a cell.”

Mr Henry Dunbar, Grand Master of the Orange Order, said: “I call upon every member of the Order to enjoy the day with the utmost decorum.

“I also have a message to our more boisterous supporters: you are welcome, but please enjoy the music, colour and excitement of the march responsibly – and leave the booze at home.”

People driving in and around the city centre while the march is taking place have been advised to leave extra time for their journey or consider alternative routes for the duration of the marches.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

School trip red tape ‘to be cut’

Pupil and teacherMinisters say school trips can broaden children’s horizons
Related Stories

The government is publishing new guidelines for parents and teachers in England which it hopes will mean more children go on school trips.

The Department for Education has told schools and local authorities to ditch “unnecessary paperwork”, and has cut its 150 pages of guidelines to eight.

Education Secretary Michael Gove said it would mean a “more common sense approach to health and safety”.

And the Health and Safety Executive said it hoped to dispel legal “myths”.

HSE chairman Judith Hackitt told the Daily Telegraph that health and safety was often being used as “scapegoat”.

“The creeping culture of risk-aversion and fear of litigation… puts at risk our children’s education and preparation for adult life,” she said.

“Children today are denied – often on spurious health and safety grounds – many of the formative experiences that shaped my generation.

“Playgrounds have become joyless, for fear of a few cuts and bruises. Science in the classroom is becoming sterile and uninspiring.”

Ministers said school trips could broaden children’s horizons but fear of prosecution was too often used as an excuse not to organise them.

They said that in the past five years only two cases had been brought against schools for breaches of health and safety law on a visit.

The new guidelines clarify that written parental consent is not needed for each activity and encourage schools to use a new one-off consent form signed once when a child starts at a school.

Mr Gove said: “Children should be able to go on exciting school trips that broaden their horizons.

“That is why we are cutting unnecessary red tape in schools and putting teachers back in charge.

“This new, slimmer advice means a more common sense approach to health and safety. It will make it easier for schools to make lessons more inspiring and fun.”

The Department for Education says the revised guidance:

Summarises the legal duties of head teachers, governing bodies and local authorities on health and safety, and covers activities that take place on and off school premisesMakes clear that a written risk assessment does not need to be carried out every time a school takes pupils on a regular, routine local visit, for example to a swimming pool or museumTackles “myths and teachers’ fears about being prosecuted” by making the law clearerClarifies that parental consent is not necessary for pupils to take part in the majority of off-site activities organised by a school, as most of these activities take place during school hours and are a normal part of a child’s education.

The National Union of Teachers has welcomed the move but said proper protection for staff and children should be maintained.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.