So far, many applications that ran well under macOS Mojave and macOS Catalina run fine under emulation. Intel-based applications that are not updated to Universal will run under Rosetta 2 on Apple Silicon-based Macs. Regarding "all today's Mac apps are scheduled for death around 2022", that is not accurate. Users who continue to run old Adobe software with a compatible OS (Mac or Windows) do so without support available from Adobe. Of course, anything CC2018 and older is no longer supported by Adobe. That said, the versions that have always been compatible with High Sierra (including CS6) will remain so. But, again, based on Adobe's policy to support the current and two versions prior, users of High Sierra can expect support to end soon for all Adobe applications. As such, the latest version of some Adobe software like Photoshop version 22.0.1, Illustrator 25.0.1, InDesign 16.0, and XD version 35.1.12 will show as "not compatible" in Creative Cloud Desktop however, some current versions like After Effects 17.5.1, Premiere Pro 14.6, Media Encoder 14.6 are still compatible with High Sierra. With macOS 11 Big Sur being released just this month, macOS 10.13 High Sierra is now four versions back instead of three. On both Mac and Windows, Adobe supports the current OS and the prior two OS versions.
This is true of all of the main CS applications (Illustrator, After Effects, InDesign, Premiere Pro, Media Encoder, and Audition).
#Older versions of adobe photoshop free fro windows 10 driver#
Due to changes in QuickTime as a system driver for time-based media, it may be more stable under macOS 10.12 Sierra when using features that rely on QuickTime. Photoshop CS6 runs under macOS up to macOS 10.13 High Sierra. The information that you provided is incorrect.