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Sunday, July 6, 2008

Software for Digital Image Editing

By David Peters

In today's market there is one image-editing software that stands out above the rest. The program is Photoshop and it is easy to understand its appeal due to the amazingly high performance effects offered and the ease with which they are used. Photoshop offers the ability to perform all of your graphic editing needs with only a few simple clicks and in a fraction of the time that it would have taken most other programs.

Photoshop does come with a price tag that some may consider high, especially when there are freeware editors available, but with the wide expanse of features it offers, it is considered a vital program for anyone working with any graphics medium from print to the web and even to movies and television.

This higher price tag has resulted in a large number of cheaper rivals (the majority of which are considered inferior) and the blatant piracy of Photoshop itself. To combat this practice, Photoshop has introduced a scaled down version of the original program known as Photoshop Elements which has been a favorite amongst beginners.

How exactly did the Photoshop phenomenon begin? Photoshop development started in 1987 and was first introduced on the market in 1990. Adobe has continued to nurture and develop this product since, continuously implementing the advances in hardware power. Still today, to get the most from Photoshop, you should use purchase as much RAM as your budget will allow.

Adobe has had some help in Photoshop reaching the acclaim that it has. Photoshop comes equipped with a plugin design that has allowed for various plugins to be obtainable for more advanced work. This includes some plugins that in fact cost more and do more than the original program.

In this manner, Photoshop is frequently used in the same aspect as Windows as a springboard. It would be a tremendous endeavor to get these plugins to run with any other software, making competitors essentially ineffective to those using a plugin.

Today, you can get Photoshop for Windows and Mac OS (both OS 9 and OS X). If you want to use it on Linux, however, you will have to use Crossover Office, Codeweavers' program that allows some Windows software to run on Linux, but it will be quite slow.

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