![]() ![]() There were some small glitches (likely because of the pre-release version I have been using). Of course, nothing can ever be fast enough. Adjustment brushes and other performance-draining edits all felt much more fluid. Even some exports took nearly half the time. In early tests of Lightroom Classic CC, this dropped to fractions of a second, even with my usual 200+ tabs open across 20+ Safari windows running alongside Mail, six various cloud storage applications integrated into my operating system, and multiple smaller applications such as Calendar faithfully standing by. To this day, on my system, images large and small have often taken as long as ten seconds to load when switching to the Develop Module. While there are more specific details on this in a review coming later today, performance is definitely improved. Lightroom Classic CC is deceptively important update to the Lightroom desktop application (previously Lightroom CC) with just two new features: some Develop Module updates and major performance improvements. For every professional photographer that doesn't need or want a major user interface upgrade, that just wants everything to work better, that just wants to keep shooting and do less editing with a speedy editor - this is the release for you. Thankfully, Photoshop CC is still Photoshop CC. This also has some amazing implications and features. The major difference is that everything with Lightroom CC is powered by and lives within the cloud. Meanwhile, Lightroom CC is a new Lightroom product that uses a completely new (but similar) user interface based on the original Lightroom. It has some nifty updates we'll get to soon. That desktop application that you're so familiar with and that you've been calling, "Lightroom," for more than a decade - that is now called Lightroom Classic CC, not Lightroom CC. There will be no further updates after this year to Lightroom 6. While Lightroom 6 will still be available for an unspecified amount of time, going forward, there will simply be two new subscription-only desktop versions: Lightroom Classic CC and Lightroom CC. There will be a Lightroom 6.3 update that will provide Nikon D850 support (which is here now for Lightroom Classic CC, Lightroom CC, and Photoshop CC), but that's all that we can expect. But it'll make sense soon.įirst, Lightroom 6 will be the final standalone version of Lightroom. ![]() But the first thing we have to get out of the way is some clarification when it comes to the new Lightroom branding. Selecting a region changes the language and/or content on 're going to take this announcement on an app-by-app basis. See: Update to camera support policy in CS6 Note 6: Adobe Camera Raw will no longer be updated for Photoshop CS6 after version 9.1.1. ![]() Note 5: If you are using Mac OS 10.6, Windows XP, or Windows Vista, Adobe Camera Raw 8.4 and later is not compatible. For more information, see Error "not enough memory" when you open a camera raw file in Photoshop Elements 4.0.1 (Mac OS 10.3). Note 4: If you are using Mac OS 10.3.x, then Camera Raw 4.1 is the latest version that you can install for Photoshop Elements 4.0.1. For more information, see Use Camera Raw 5.x with Photoshop Elements 6 when you also have Photoshop CS3 installed (Mac OS). Note 3: When you install Adobe Bridge CS3 as part of Photoshop Elements 6 on Mac OS, Adobe Bridge supports Camera Raw through version 5.5. You cannot update the Camera Raw plug-in for After Effects 7. Note 2: After Effects 7 includes version 3.2.0.1 of the Camera Raw plug-in, which was designed solely for use with After Effects 7. Note 1: For any version of Adobe Premiere Elements, you can import supported digital camera raw images but you cannot access the Camera Raw dialog box. ![]()
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