Adobe announced CS5 versions of Adobe® After Effects® and Adobe Premiere® Pro on April 12, 2010. The CS5 versions are 64-bit ONLY. What this means is that these programs only run in 64-bit mode on 64-bit operating systems, including Mac OS X 10.5 an 10.6, and Windows Vista 64-bit and Windows 7 64-bit.

Using a Nexus-One AVD 800x480 with default settings and enabling the snapshot, decreased my boot/startup time from 8 minutes to 2 minutes. Emulator lagging on mac.

Jump in the driver’s seat and experience the unprecedented power of Adobe® Creative Suite 5.5 Master Collection software — the full array of creative tools in a single value-packed offering. During your free 30-day trial, you can access step-by-step tutorials on the most popular features and learn entirely new ways to create for mobile, video, print, and online media. • Design with a new level of efficiency and precision • Create package prototypes fast • See how you can turn flat packaging into a 3D representation using perspective drawing tools in Adobe Illustrator® CS5. • Make image elements disappear • Learn how you can use Content-Aware Fill in Adobe Photoshop® CS5 Extended to fill in the space left behind when you are removing an image detail or object. • Columns whenever you want them • Discover how you can easily span a selected paragraph over multiple columns or split a group of columns into additional columns with Adobe InDesign® CS5.5. • Develop digital experiences for virtually any screen • Optimize for mobile devices • Explore how Adobe Dreamweaver® CS5.5 enables you to quickly customize and test web projects across multiple devices.

• Build digital publications for tablets • Learn how to create engaging and interactive digital magazines and preview your work before it goes live with Adobe InDesign® CS5.5. • Creating pixel-aligned web graphics • See how you can design graphics that will appear sharp and crisp on the web by automatically aligning them to the pixel grid with Adobe Illustrator® CS5. • Tackle post-production challenges faster than ever • Streamline your video workflow • Create an animated DVD menu fast by using Adobe Dynamic Link to work between Adobe After Effects® CS5.5, Adobe Premiere Pro® CS5.5, and Adobe Encore® CS5.5. • Create a matte with less work • See how using the Roto Brush tool in Adobe After Effects® CS5.5 helps you create a matte without tedious rotoscoping. • Output video for multiple devices • Learn how to quickly output work for virtually any video format or device, including smartphones and tablets, using Adobe Media Encoder CS5.5 with Adobe Premiere® Pro CS5.5. Steps (Windows).

So, I just purchased myself a new 15in MacBook Pro after my beloved Early 2006 17in MacBook Pro died the True Death™. I am on my out of the store when I realized I should ask if my copy of Adobe CS3 will be able to make the jump to Lion, since I read that 10.7 is dropping support for PPC code. He said that CS3 would not work since it is PPC. I was a little sad because I want to upgrade to Lion when it comes out, but I am not in the right financial place to upgrade the design software that is suiting my needs just fine. BUT when I got home and got my data and apps transferred over I decide to have a little look at the info for some of the Adobe apps and they all say that the apps are Universal, and not PPC only.

The most recent mac os x version is

Which leads me to believe they WILL work under Lion. Video screen and presenter at the same time for mac. Now we have two opposing views: the No from the Apple clerk who may have been mistaken, and the Maybe from evidence presented by the software itself. So, do any of you fine folks have the straight answer to this quandary?

Compatable

I would love to upgrade to Lion when it launches, but not if it means I have drop $800 on software upgrades I really don’t need (and can’t afford). I couldn't say that it'll be totally problem free, but as far as potential issues due PPC-legacy code goes, you'll be fine. CS3 was the first universal release of the CS suite and was indeed half the point of upgrading to it. I've run CS3 on Snow Leopard without installing Rosetta and it ran fine; it should effectively be the same as the situation on Lion. However, knowing Adobe (and Apple), there's a non insignificant chance of something else breaking which will make CS3 buggy and/or unstable, or even incompatible, with Lion. I've run CS3 on Snow Leopard without installing Rosetta and it ran fine; it should effectively be the same as the situation on Lion. I used the Migration Assistant to set up the new computer and immediately fired up Photoshop to reactivate it.

It launched just fine and it didn’t even enter into my mind that Rosetta wasn’t installed out of the box. It wasn’t until my roommate was drooling all over my sexy new machine and launched the copy of Internet Explorer for Mac that I have installed for laughs when he said, 'What’s Rosetta, and why do you need to install it to run IE?' That is when I suspected that the Apple guy might be wrong. So, I just purchased myself a new 15in MacBook Pro after my beloved Early 2006 17in MacBook Pro died the True Death™. I am on my out of the store when I realized I should ask if my copy of Adobe CS3 will be able to make the jump to Lion, since I read that 10.7 is dropping support for PPC code. He said that CS3 would not work since it is PPC. I was a little sad because I want to upgrade to Lion when it comes out, but I am not in the right financial place to upgrade the design software that is suiting my needs just fine.