Software Review: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2

Software Review: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2
Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2 is the much anticipated second version of Adobe’s highly praised photo management and editing system. Photoshop Lightroom 2 adds new editing tools as well as enhances the existing environment, while at the same time reduces the dependence on Adobe’s Photoshop. On the outside, Photoshop Lightroom 2 retains much of the look and feel of its predecessor, while providing many workflow improvements that will have current users singing its praises. As well as the expected improvements to existing functionality that one would anticipate in a version two product, there are also a lot more features to improve your importing, processing, managing, and the showcasing of your images. Before we look at the improvements and enhancements, what do you need to run Lightroom 2? You will need Windows XP SP2 or Vista on an Intel Pentium 4 – 1.4 GHz or higher, or Mac OS X 10.4 or 10.5 on PowerPC G4 or G5, or Intel Based Processor, 1GB RAM 1 GB hard drive space, 1024×768 display, and CD-ROM Drive. For those who are new to Adobe Photoshop Lightroom, I find that there is still some confusion between Lightroom and Photoshop. The basic difference it that Photoshop is an image editing program. It has the big guns to do just about anything you want to an image. What it doesn’t have is true image management, organization, and workflow processing that a photographer might want and need. Sure, it has Adobe Bridge, and that works great to a point, but for someone who is a photographer; whether professional or hobbyist, it really is not enough. That is where Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2 comes in. It has all of the things that Adobe Bridge was missing; these include things like advanced file management, enhanced printing capabilities, and easy web output. Lightroom then adds much of those image processing capabilities that Photoshop contains and are used by photographers. It puts it all into a single package. Does that mean that you no longer need Photoshop? For some that answer would be yes. In fact Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2 is the better choice, especially for those who do not do a lot of advanced processing. For others, Lightroom is a better way to get to that point where they send their file to Photoshop for additional enhancements. So what is new with Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2? В• Local Adjustment Brush – gives you a more flexible method to apply more accurate enhancements by targeting a specific area of a photo for dodging, burning, as well as other local adjustments. Make exposure, brightness, clarity, or other enhancements exactly where you want them.page 1 | 2 | 3

Software Review: Adobe Audition 3 from Adobe Systems

Software Review: Adobe Audition 3 from Adobe Systems
Adobe Audition 3 is the latest release of the comprehensive Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) production solution from Adobe Systems. It features a multitrack, mix/edit environment that you can use to create your own music, record and mix a project, produce a radio spot, clean up audio for a movie, as well as compile and edit a soundtrack. In fact it is your own personal recording studio. What do you need to run Adobe Audition 3? You need to be running Windows on an Intel Pentium 4 – 1.4 GHz or higher, Windows XP SP2 or Vista, 512 RAM, 10 GB hard drive space, Microsoft DirectX or ASIO compatible sound card, and DVD-ROM Drive. Adobe Audition started out as Cool Edit from Syntrillium Software in the early 1990's and was developed by former Microsoft employees Robert Ellison and David Johnston. Adobe purchased Cool Edit Pro v2.1 in May of 2003 as well as a large loop library called Loopology. They renamed it to Audition and version 1 was released in August 2003. This version, Audition 3, was released in November 2007. So what is new with Adobe Audition 3? • VSTi virtual instrument support – now gives you a wider range of virtual instruments that you can add to your production. Simply add a MIDI track host to your mix, choose an instrument, then record new audio in the Sequencer. • Enhanced spectral editing – has made your frequency space editing more flexible with the new Effects Paintbrush and Spot Healing brush. Now you can make a free-form selection in frequency space and apply the effects in varying degrees to that selection. You now have a Marquee selection tool to zero into a specific area, and a Bitmap import/export option that will allow you to edit your audio in Photoshop to change minute details and optimize your audio file. • Improved multitrack editing – gives you increased accuracy by editing clips that are grouped together. You can then trim and delete, split clips, and add fades across multiple tracks just by grouping clips. You can even mix down multitrack files into a single file for use as a new track. • New effects – such as Convolution Reverb, Analog Delay, Mastering tool, and Tube-modeled Compressor. These along with 50 audio effects create new possibilities for whole different sounds. • Radius time stretching from iZotope – will let you slow down or speed up an audio piece without changing pitch or you can change pitch without changing tempo by the use of the high quality time-stretching algorithm from iZoTope. • Guitar Suite effects – will let you tailor your sound with analog-modeled guitar effects. Components such as Simple Compressor, Adjustment Filter module, Distortion Module, and Box Modeling module are built into Guitar Suite. Apply one effect or stack many together to create unique sounds.page 1 | 2

Software Review – Adobe Technical Communication Suite – Adobe FrameMaker 8 From Adobe Systems

Software Review – Adobe Technical Communication Suite – Adobe FrameMaker 8 From Adobe Systems
This is the first of a series of four reviews that will cover what is contained in the Adobe Technical Communication Suite. Unlike the Adobe Creative Suite, the Technical Communications Suite is geared for technical communicators, help authors, instructional designers, and training professionals. The suite contains four products; FrameMaker, RoboHelp, Captivate, and Acrobat 3D. The goal of this series it to define what each product does and provide information of what the new version brings to the table. What do you need to run Adobe FrameMaker 8? You need Windows, an Intel® Pentium® 4, Intel Centrino®, Intel Xeon®, or Intel Core™ Duo (or compatible) processor, Windows 2000 (the trial version will not run on 2000), XP SP2 or Vista, 512 MB RAM, video card capable of displaying 256 colors recommended, 600 MB hard drive space and CD-ROM Drive, Adobe Postscript, PCL or GDI printer (Postscript printer recommended). Adobe FrameMaker 8 is a desktop publishing and word processing application that is geared for the creation of large documents. Originally created by Frame Technology, FrameMaker was acquired by Adobe in 1995. There has been off and on talk around the industry that Adobe was going to wind down development of the FrameMaker product. This came to a peak after they ceased support for the product on the Macintosh in 2004. Now with the release of FrameMaker 8 in July of 2007 and with the inclusion as a major portion of FrameMaker 8 in the November release of the Technical Communications Suite, it should put an end to those rumors. FrameMaker 8 is a key functionary in the Technical Communications Suite that  provides for creating and publishing technical documentation. It combines word processing capabilities and XML-based structured authoring with template based publishing. With FrameMaker 8 you can create, edit, and publish content with features for automatic numbering, cross-referencing, table of content, indexing, books, and more. You can work in style tagging word processor mode, or in a fully structured environment optimized for editing and producing valid XML and SGML. You can manage content entirely in XML, use XSLT during editing, and conform to industry standards such as DITA and DocBook. So what is new with Adobe FrameMaker 8? • Unicode Support – you can now edit and support content in multiple languages as well as author content for global audiences with dictionary and hyphenation support for more languages. • DITA Support – FrameMaker 8 now supports the DITA standard. DITA is the XML-based architecture for authoring, producing, and delivering technical information. You can now use a prebuilt DITA application to author, publish, and distribute topic-oriented information in XML as well as creating DITA maps. • Rich Media Support – Now with the Technical Communications Suite, you can combine content into multiple forms. You can create more engaging online documentation by incorporating 3D models, rich Adobe Flash Player compatible animations, and simulations created with Adobe Captivate software, as well as creating Adobe PDF files incorporating live 3D models. • Text Edit Tracking and Multiple Undo – now allows you to highlight, accept, and reject text changes as well as undo multiple changes with a single click using the History Palette. page 1 | 2