Posts Tagged Adobe Systems

Adobe Crash Reports Make Us Rue The Day We Got Married, Too [Humor]

Posted by on Tuesday, 18 May, 2010

Adobe Hits Apple With Hugs [Flash]

Posted by on Thursday, 13 May, 2010

Year after liver transplant, Apple’s ‘ Steve Jobs is back’ and ‘invigorated’

Posted by on Tuesday, 11 May, 2010

Year after liver transplant, Apple’s ‘ Steve Jobs is back’ and ‘invigorated’
Apple Inc. ‘s Steve Jobs , a year after getting a liver transplant that saved his life, is back at work full tilt, overseeing product development, leading a campaign against Adobe Systems Inc.’s Flash and endorsing a California law that promotes organ donat.

Read more on New York Daily News


Adobe Releases Flash Player 10.1 And AIR 2.0 – Both Include Multi-touch Support

Posted by on Tuesday, 17 November, 2009

A mere week after Adobe Systems reported that it would be shedding nearly 700 employees or 9% of its total worldwide workforce, the company is releasing two highly anticipated new products that have been in the works for a while: Flash Player 10.1 and AIR 2.0.

Both of the products are being released with a ‘beta’ label at the same time for all 3 major operating systems (Windows, Mac and Linux) and x86-based netbooks, and are available now via Adobe Labs.

People who were still hoping for a beta release of the new Flash Player for mobile will be somewhat disappointed by the fact that they’ll have to exercise even more patience.



Lightroom 3: Bring on the time-lapse videos

Posted by on Friday, 30 October, 2009
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Adobe Systems released the first Lightroom 3.0 beta only last week, but already people are adapting the software for their own ends. In Sean McCormack‘s case, time-lapse video.

Time-lapse photography, for those unfamiliar with it, compresses a sequence of still images into a movie that appears to speed up the passage of time. It’s how nature documentaries get those clouds scudding over the mountains and the sun racing across the sky.

Most of us use just a small fraction of what our software can do, but McCormack is one of those people at the other end of the spectrum who figures out how to push software well beyond the built-in feature set. In Lightroom’s case he took advantage of its ability to export a sequence of shots as a video, a feature designed to let photographers create easily shared slideshows.

Originally posted at Deep Tech


Speed and image quality core to Lightroom 3 beta

Posted by on Thursday, 22 October, 2009
The Lightroom 3 beta will look familiar to current users, but there are changes under the hood. In addition, Lightroom catalogs can be synchronized with Flickr. width="617" height="382" />

The Lightroom 3 beta will look familiar to current users, but there are changes under the hood. In addition, Lightroom catalogs can be synchronized with Flickr.

(Credit:
Adobe Systems)

With the release of its first beta version of Photoshop Lightroom 3.0 on Wednesday night, Adobe Systems is trying to improve the heart of the photographic editing and cataloging software.

“With Lightroom 3, we’re looking at a performance and image quality rearchitecture,” said Product Manager Tom Hogarty. Those two goals are in opposition, since better image quality demands more computing horsepower. But Hogarty said the software is more responsive when moving among photos, and images look better with new noise reduction and sharpening abilities.

There are other changes, too, though: a revamped import process for importing photos into the software catalog; built-in connections to upload photos to online services and keep them in sync; a more flexible mechanism for laying out photos to be printed; new abilities for stamping watermarks onto photos; and the ability to export photos and music as a video file.

Originally posted at Deep Tech