| Canva, really? Is this looking forward at what is coming? I see the rise of and have to deal with Canva-generated PDFs instead of Adobe Illustrator. So the low end market of video / animation, I could absolutely see Canva dominating. Doubt we'll see audio tools though. Final Cut Pro -- Professional non-linear video editing
* Canva? Partial: Best for social clips; lacks FCP’s RAW, multicam, and AI transcript tools. Logic Pro -- Professional music production and MIDI sequencing
* Canva? No: No DAW capabilities, plugin hosting, or live mixing. Pixelmator Pro -- Advanced image editing and graphic design
* Canva? Partial: Good for templates; lacks Pixelmator’s precision layers and AI retouching. Motion -- 2D/3D motion graphics and cinematic effects
* Canva? No: Canva uses presets; Motion offers granular keyframing and VFX creation. Compressor -- Advanced media encoding and batch exporting
* Canva? No: No control over specific codecs, bitrates, or pro output formats. MainStage -- Live performance audio rig for stage use
* Canva? No: No live audio processing or MIDI instrument hosting. Keynote -- Cinematic presentations and slide decks
* Canva? Yes: Canva’s primary competitor for collaborative, template-based slides. Pages -- Word processing and page layout
* Canva? Yes: Canva Docs is a direct alternative for visual/marketing documents. Numbers -- Spreadsheets and data visualization
* Canva? Yes: Canva Sheets handles basic data viz, though lacks Numbers' complex formulas. |
Apple can't take the market from professionals; they need the easel they learned at school. But they can definitely compete with Canva, whose market are untrained artists who need something done easily.