§A · Dispatch · Landing
Adobe Inc jets back to San Jose on day of major AI productivity launch
The CEO's Gulfstream returned to headquarters as Adobe unveiled its new Productivity Agent, redefining information handling in the AI era.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Adobe Inc
Adobe Inc
Adobe Inc's Gulfstream G650ER, tail number N82123 and primarily used by CEO Shantanu Narayen, departed Hollywood Burbank Airport at 7:14 p.m. on May 6, 2026, touching down at Norman Y. Mineta San Jose International Airport just 55 minutes later. The short hop covered 320 miles at altitudes up to 32,000 feet, with ground speeds peaking at 483 knots. It's the kind of efficient jaunt that underscores the perks of private aviation for tech executives shuttling between coastal hubs.
The timing couldn't have been more pointed: the jet landed in San Jose, Adobe Inc's headquarters city, on the very morning the company announced its new Productivity Agent. Per Adobe's press release dated May 6, this tool aims to redefine how people understand, create, and share information, leveraging AI to boost efficiency amid intensifying competition in the software space. With recent whispers of shifts in Adobe's strategy—echoed in April's Summit discussions with Nvidia's Jensen Huang—such innovations feel like a quiet pivot to stay ahead in the AI arms race.
This flight bookends a quick out-and-back pattern, following a May 5 trip from near San Jose coordinates to Burbank, suggesting a brief Los Angeles-area engagement—perhaps client meetings or Hollywood-adjacent deals, given Adobe's creative software footprint. San Jose remains the anchor, aligning with recurring routes to New York, Los Angeles, Seattle, and Austin, where the company's major offices hum with the business of digital empires. In a wry twist, even as AI promises to automate the mundane, the CEO still clocks the miles.
Aboard the Gulfstream G650ER


The aircraft
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