![]() ![]() However, it also doesn’t look like Apple plans to offer a break for folks who already own Final Cut Pro or Logic Pro for Mac. To be fair, Apple’s subscription pricing isn’t particularly onerous when you consider what the Mac versions sell for. Ditto for Logic Pro, which sells for $200 for the Mac version but will offer the same subscription pricing for its iPad counterpart. ![]() While Final Cut Pro for Mac sells as a hefty one-time $300 purchase, Apple is going with a subscription-based model for the iPad: $4.99/month or $49 per year, with the usual one-month free trial. Perhaps the most exciting thing about Apple’s new duo of Pro apps for iPad is how the company is pricing them. Final Cut Pro for iPad and Logic Pro for iPad will be available on May 23 to help you push your iPad to new heights. Of course, Apple also surely wants its customers to be able to get their hands on its latest flagship apps as quickly as possible. This seems like the sort of big unveil that would be more suited to a WWDC Keynote, but perhaps that’s a good sign Apple likely already has such a packed schedule of exciting stuff planned for WWDC that it wants to clear the stage by getting these “smaller” announcements out of the way. ![]() Today’s announcement actually came as a bit of a surprise, considering that Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) is less than a month away. After years in the making, Apple’s flagship “pro” apps, Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro, have finally come to the iPad - a move that further solidifies Apple’s tablets as tools for serious professionals. ![]()
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