TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Ask HN: What share of software you use is American?

4 pointsby andreev_ioabout 5 years ago
How much of the software you use daily is backed by a US-based company? Has the number been changing over the years?<p>Given that we all are in the same information bubble, I wonder if we are over- or underestimating the lead of the US software industry.

1 comment

open-source-uxabout 5 years ago
The interesting question for me is: big vs small companies. Can small companies successfully carve a slice out of a industry dominated by large companies? Has that happened? Or do big companies still dominate?<p>Anyway, to your actually question...I like to keep an eye on visual design or illustration apps, and the picture is quite varied.<p>Adobe continues to dominate with their suite of creative apps. But they are playing catch-up in some areas. Sketch (Netherlands) and now Figma (US) both dominate apps for UI design. Adobe XD is popular (Adobe made it free to encourage adoption) but it doesn&#x27;t enjoy the same &quot;mindshare&quot; among designers and it doesn&#x27;t appear to be displacing Sketch or Figma.<p>On the iPad, Procreate (Australia) has become incredibly popular for digital illustration. Adobe recently launched their own digital app called Fresco clearly taking aim at Procreate. It&#x27;s too early to see how Fresco will do, but I can&#x27;t see it displacing the popularity of Procreate.<p>I also can&#x27;t see Photoshop, Illustrator or InDesign losing any significant market share, but the Affinity suite of apps (Designer, Photo and Publisher) made by Serif (UK) has been hugely successful. I sense some designers (many?) would like to ditch Adobe if they could find suitable alternatives.<p>There is no real competitor to After Effects for professional 2D motion graphics, but there is a promising new 2D animation tool called Cavalry made by Mainframe (UK). It&#x27;s in beta so too early to know what will happen. Blackmagic Design (Australia) make a combined video editor and compositing tool called DaVinci Resolve which does let you create motion graphics. DaVinci Resolve is a professional-level editor using in the film and TV industry.<p>There are dozens of other paining and drawing apps that have carved out a niche. For comics, Clip Studio Paint (Japan) is popular. Other drawing tools from Japan include MediBang Paint and Paint Tool SAI which are popular for creating manga.<p>So to sum up, Adobe still dominates, but smaller companies are gaining popularity and usage.