Adobe launched Frame.io Drive, a desktop app that mounts Frame.io projects to Finder or Explorer and streams footage on demand. Editors, designers, and motion artists can open mounted assets directly in Premiere, Photoshop, and After Effects without waiting for files to sync. The rollout began April 15 for Enterprise customers, with other Frame.io plans to follow.
With Drive, Frame.io extends its role from review and approval into production ingest, editorial, and asset management.
How It Works
Once installed, Frame.io Drive makes cloud projects appear as local folders on Mac or Windows. Media streams as applications request it, with local caching handling scrubbing, playback, and large files. Teams mount the same project simultaneously, pulling from one shared source of media, metadata, permissions, and structure.
Open footage directly in Premiere without pre-downloading
Access layered assets in Photoshop from mounted projects
Composite in After Effects against cloud-hosted plates
Support extends to third-party applications, though specific NLEs beyond Adobe's own suite are not named
Mounted Storage is included with every Frame.io account, meaning the underlying architecture ships to the full user base even as Drive itself rolls out in phases.
Suite Studios Under the Hood
Frame.io Drive is built on streaming technology from Suite Studios, a Boulder-based cloud-native file streaming company and Adobe partner. The system uses Netflix-style chunking, sending only the portion of a file an application requests rather than transferring full media ahead of time.
That approach separates Drive from standard sync-and-cache tools. Instead of pulling a full RAW frame or ProRes master to disk, the app fetches the chunk needed for playback or a specific operation.
From Review Tool to Media Foundation
Frame.io began as a review-and-approval platform. Drive pushes it upstream into ingest and editorial, putting the cloud between the camera and the NLE rather than after the cut is locked.
The move also ties into Adobe's broader push with Firefly AI, which we covered when Adobe expanded the model into video. A centralized mounted source gives Firefly a cleaner hook into production media, since AI operations can act on assets inside Frame.io without separate uploads or round-trips through local drives.
The approach differs from multi-cloud bridges like Strada, which we covered for pulling media across Dropbox, Frame.io, and Google Drive. Drive is a single-vendor play: everything lives on Frame.io, and Adobe apps get privileged access.
Rollout and Availability
Enterprise customers received access beginning April 15. Other Frame.io tiers, including plans bundled with Creative Cloud subscriptions, roll out in phases via waitlist. Adobe has not disclosed whether Mounted Storage usage will count against existing Frame.io storage limits.
For teams already running a Frame.io backbone, Drive is likely to land as a straight workflow upgrade. For shops evaluating cloud-native NLEs or interoperable review platforms, the question is whether a single-stack Adobe-plus-Frame.io workflow is worth committing to over a multi-vendor cloud setup.
What to Watch
The real test arrives at NAB, where Adobe is demoing the app at booth N2141. What matters most is how Drive handles 8K plates, multicam proxies, and concurrent edits, since that load is what reveals whether Mounted Storage is production-ready. If it holds, Frame.io's role expands well beyond review.


