Adobe continues to prove the iPad is a powerful creative tool

Adobe continues to prove the iPad is a powerful creative tool
            Adobe ha publicado actualizaciones importantes para sus aplicaciones creativas.  Al hacerlo, continúa cumpliendo la promesa "post-PC" detrás del iPad de Apple, con nuevas y poderosas características que demuestran la capacidad de la tableta para hacer un trabajo real.</p><h2><strong>Un trozo de TI </strong></h2><p>En parte, Adobe logra esto al continuar agregando funcionalidad desde sus productos de escritorio / portátiles a Photoshop para iPad.  La última actualización agrega las poderosas herramientas Healing Brush y Magic Wand a la aplicación, las cuales amplían las capacidades de algunas computadoras portátiles, sin mencionar las tabletas.  Fresco en iPad obtiene nuevas capas de ajuste basadas en colores.
What's important to consider when thinking about all these features is the amount of computational work an iPad does when using these tools. This is impressive in many ways, especially as a real demonstration of the rapidly evolving capabilities of these machines. It's an evolution that hasn't been without sweat in Cupertino. Just think of the huge investments made to develop processor technologies that work hand in hand with the operating system to enable iPads to tackle this heavy duty. Apple's steadfast determination to create a new category of IT remains intact.

The post-PC promise

The fact that you can run powerful creative apps like Photoshop or Illustrator on Apple tablets should be taken as proof of how far you've come so far. You can use Fresco on iPad to draw full images and a new projection feature to share your canvas on a larger monitor. The decision to put the same M1 processors in iPad Pros and Macs also shows this. After all, the M1 Macs offer significant speed boosts when running Photoshop, so the M1 iPads should also offer what may seem like incredible performance compared to traditional expectations of what a tablet can achieve. The recently promised Universal Control feature, but missing from the beta, will bring iPads and Macs even closer to creative and business users once it arrives. Although it supports features, Photoshop on iPad is not complete. Adobe also continues to develop new features that take advantage of Macs while continuing to expand the set of features available on iPads. The latest enhancements give Macs a powerful replacement for the sky; a transformation chain tool fitted with independent Bézier shanks; and access to better feature tips tutorials and a new beta version of Photoshop for all Creative Suite users. It sounds like it's probably only a matter of time before iPads pick up those features, too.

touch the skies

Your company's creative teams will also be interested in following up on Adobe news later this fall. The company has announced plans to hold its annual Adobe Max conference online in October. The free event will offer more than 400 sessions for creative users and is frequently used as a forum for Adobe news announcements. What's also interesting about Adobe Max this year is the timing: Apple likely introduced new iPhones around the time of the Adobe event. But it could also have plans for its own fall announcement of new products for creative markets, like the much-hyped MacBook Pro M1X, potentially featuring the same mini-LED display as the latest 12,9-inch iPad Pro. There's no question that Adobe's creative apps team aspires to stay in sync with Apple's hardware product plans. "This is just the beginning, and we look forward to bringing even more performance gains and Photoshop magic to life on Apple's new silicon platform," said Mark Dahm, Photoshop product manager. “As Apple's silicon line expands into the future, the fact that Photoshop runs natively on the M1 architecture means that it can be constantly tuned and optimized to take full advantage of the resource advances that Apple's silicon offers. has to offer. "Follow me on Twitter or join me on the AppleHolic bar & grill and Apple discussion groups on MeWe.
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