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From:Adobe
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| User Rating: Amazon Sales Rank:#93 |
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6 of 7 customers found the following review helpful:
Using with Windows XP--No Bugs, 2007-10-22 I've been using the product with Windows XP Pro and everything seems to work fine. It does take a bit getting used to the new location of palette and menu items. Is this upgrade worth it? If you need the specific features sure. We bought it to put it on 2 new machines.
16 of 21 customers found the following review helpful:
WONDERFUL!! It would be perfect if it weren't so hard!, 2007-07-16 I absolutely LOVE this program. Only thing...I want to do soo many things, but it is so hard! I literally cannot find tutorials to do certain things ANYWHERE! Best bet would to ask how on Yahoo!Answers. I got some good answers there. OTher than that, I love it!
19 of 24 customers found the following review helpful:
Creative and fun, 2007-07-07 I was getting my moneys worth out of the elements 2.0. This is a whole different experience as far as options and ease of use. The camera RAW is a great way to start the day and I love the many filters, black and white options, zillion options for layers and the ease of learning (just kidding a bit there on the learning part, you could spend a year learning about this and just be getting a good start.)There are so many options that I imagine many people just get their fav little ways of solving things and stay there. Try the High Pass sharpening technique for print output as found on page 595 of Adobe Photoshop CS3 for Photgraphers by Martin Evening. I love this one!
12 of 26 customers found the following review helpful:
advanced but somewhat squirrely, 2007-06-07 This is the premier photo editing program, but the advancement comes at the price of some instability, pariculary in the companion Bridge
70 of 102 customers found the following review helpful:
Wait for CS4, 2007-05-30 I guess the folks at Adobe paid their staff to write some Amazon reviews....
I've been using Photoshop since version 2 and have been teaching Photoshop classes for over 10 years, and this is the worst upgrade ever (two stars since, well, it IS Photoshop afterall).
Photoshop's most touted new feature--non-destructive filters--is implemented very poorly. Rather than working like adjustment layers currently work, SmartFilters, as they are known, convert the underlying Photoshop layer into a SmartObject and places the SmartFilter on top. You CS2 users know that you can't edit a SmartObject in Photoshop--you have to go to the object's native application. So to edit the image under a SmartFilter, Photoshop opens it in a new document window (meaning you can't see its interaction with layers underneath as you edit it, and can't see how the various SmartFilters make the changed composition look until you save and return to the original document, and you can't see the effect of the SmartFilter as you edit the underlying art.
Adobe quietly retired ImageReady, so there is now NO way to open an animated GIF and edit its multiple frames in Photoshop CS3!
I've summarized the dissapointing bugs in a review of the whole Creative Suite (type "cs3" in the search field).
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