Tally vs Frame.io
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Tally adds PDF export, MCP polish, and editor ergonomics — bootstrapped grind, no big leaps.
Tally is in steady weekly-release mode. Headline shipping in April: one-click PDF export of any form submission (using the form's theme so output is on-brand and free), MCP integration improvements for AI-agent workflows, and editor productivity work — a floating table of contents on long forms, plus page-level conditional logic that landed in early March. The Trash modal got a redesign and a manual-empty option for compliance-conscious users.
Two threads run through the cadence: outputs (PDF export, themed templates) and editor scale (table of contents, page-level logic, MCP). Tally is rounding out the simple-form surface so it can stand in for contract/order-confirmation tools and so power users with 40-block forms can keep working in it. Bootstrapped pacing, no platform pivots — every release closes a specific user complaint.
Expect more output formats (signed PDFs with e-sig integrations, branded email confirmations) since the PDF release explicitly hooks into electronic signature workflows. The MCP work suggests more AI-driven form authoring or response handling is queued — easier to imagine "agent fills out a form" or "agent summarizes responses" than another form-design feature.
Frame.io adds first-class 3D review and tightens its grip inside the Adobe creative stack.
Frame.io is shipping in three coordinated tracks. The asset-format track has just added 3D as a first-class type with USD ingestion and turntable previews. The Adobe-integration track is moving from co-existence to embedding — zero-click sign-in inside Premiere, plus Frame.io assets surfacing directly in Firefly Boards. The enterprise governance track is filling in: Comparison Viewer for version diff, role-based download permissions on Shares, and the Workfront integration going GA earlier this quarter.
Post-acquisition, Frame.io is becoming Adobe's review-and-approval surface across formats and apps — not just a video collaboration tool. The 3D launch is the strongest signal: Frame.io now wants every creative artifact (video, image, PDF, 3D) to flow through the same comment, version, and approval loop. The deeper Adobe-app embedding (Premiere, Firefly Boards) suggests the next leg is making Frame.io feel native inside the Creative Cloud rather than a separate destination.
Expect the 3D review beta to add Web/USD-based variant controls and material editing comments, and for at least one more Adobe app — likely After Effects or Photoshop — to gain a Premiere-style native Frame.io panel. International expansion is the slower-burn theme; languages beyond Japanese will follow once enterprise governance has had another quarter to mature.
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