The new Version 8 of Adobe Photoshop is now called "Adobe Photoshop CS" and is part of the newly announced Adobe Creative Suite which combines full,
new versions of Adobe Photoshop CS with ImageReady CS, Adobe Illustrator CS, Adobe InDesign CS, Adobe GoLive CS, Adobe Acrobat 6.0 Professional, and the new "Version Cue" file version manager, which lets you easily track interations and quickly locate files. Note that this review of Photoshop CS is based on a (very recent) beta version, so screen captures and functionality may not be representative of the full and final product.
Introduction
Photoshop CS is no doubt the most significant Photoshop move towards digital photographers. Although this upgrade also provides exciting new features for general users, web designers, and even video editors, this article will focus on some of the exciting new features most useful to digital photographers.The simplicity of the Photoshop CS interface is as deceiving as its predecessors and at first it appears as if little has changed, making the transition from Photoshop 7 to Photoshop CS very natural, preserving most of your Photoshop learning curve. However, a closer look reveals a large number of exciting new features ranging from major things such as RAW support, and the Histogram Palette to minor things such as Crop and Straighten and the Bicubic Smoother and Bicubic Sharper interpolation options.
Adobe Photoshop CS3 System Requirements:
●Intel® Pentium 4, Intel Centrino®, Intel Xeon, Core™ Duo (or compatible) processor●Microsoft® Windows XP with Service Pack 2 or
Windows Vista™ Home Premium, Business, Ultimate or Enterprise (certified for 32-bit editions)
●512MB of RAM
●1GB of available hard disk space
●DVD-ROM drive
●1024×768 monitor resolution with 16-bit or greater video card
Some 3D features in Photoshop CS3 Extended require a DirectX 9 capable graphics card with at least 64MB of VRAM
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.