Photoshop Online – Death to all clones?
Mashable reports that Adobe has officially announced their intention to create an online photo editing app…. and it’s going to be free. Obviously it won’t be as powerful as Photoshop or even Elements, but that’s still a pretty interesting announcement with implications for EdTech budgets everywhere. I already promote the usage of tools like Picnik for very basic editing needs, times when Photoshop is just overkill. But if an official app from Adobe were out there, and if it played well with the desktop version… well, you gotta imagine that might take over the top spot in the online editing world. Something to keep an eye out for…
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We’re talking about professional adult artists here, not small children or plants that need tending. What makes a form of art making grow are artists who dedicate themselves to their process, their work, and who focus their energy on how the medium they’ve selected for themselves.
A healthy self-criticism probally doesn’t hurt the production of new work either, as with the notable artists who can tell the difference between pandering to an imagined niche market, or a specialized audience that innoculates the work from honest appraisal, and the real work that is made quite apart from anyone’s expectations or demands, except the artists’.
Good art-making is a rigorous activity, playful as it is, in whatever mode one operates out of. Everything else seems to take of itself if the art is good, worth being noticed.
harry eyeball
2/28/2007
[...] I’ve been in meetings all day, so this is the first that I’ve been able to write (it seems that Steve has noticed it as well), but it seems that there are more than a few companies that are starting to look at the online usability. Corel and now Adobe (with Lightning and Photoshop/Remix respectively – GN links) are working on applications that interact with content online. So, between the desktop apps and the online apps, these new middle apps are certainly looking to be the future. Now in addition to basic apps like Picnik, more powerful apps mean that ubiquitous computing is getting one step closer and the importance of network is ever larger. Do the Social Bookmark thing:Social bookmark links [...]
EDITing in the Dark » When platter and fiber collide
3/1/2007
Steve,
For a long time, Open Source projects like
have long enroached on Photoshop market. I know that personally, I can’t afford a Photoshop license (and I probably wouldn’t be able to use 1/100th of the features). Plus, Gimp is cross platform (Unix, Windows, Mac), making it a great choice.
Andy Allen
3/2/2007
D’Oh. Forgot to close my tag on the above comment.
I was referencing http://www.gimp.org/
which is the “GNU Image Manipulation Program”
Granted, it’s not ‘online’, but it is powerful.
Andy Allen
3/2/2007