20 Years of Photoshop 289
benwiggy writes "Photoshop turned 20 on 10th February 2010. Here's an excellent history, including how the Knoll family created one of the biggest apps of all time. The article also has screenshots of the workspace through the versions."
So good it's a verb (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, spread some lovin' over to the linux side of things. Right now that's the only thing that's keeping me from using linux as my main OS (using win7 right now).
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it's unlikely to ever happen, as that would require a complete rewrite of the entire codebase. there's so much cruft in photoshop, i don't know anyone who would even be willing to say it's even possible.
that being said, i think it probably needs a good overhaul (organic growth over 20 years can't be pretty to maintain), and i'd pay a lot for a solid *NIX port.
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*NIX port?
I think it's funny how much attention is paid to the Windows version!
Does anyone know why there are so many Windows screencaps in the cited article?
It's not like Windows 98 was the dominant platform in art departments and pre-press operations.
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Because it's not like art departments and pre-press operations were the dominant market for Photoshop.
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Does anyone know why there are so many Windows screencaps in the cited article?
I don't know about the cited article, but I do know that Photoshop CS2 is more stable on Windows XP than on MacOS X 10.4 (the last version upon which I ran it.) Adobe's probably got more experiencing at beachballing OSX than anyone else. Having to SSH in is not a fix when the machine is thrashing and it's faster to just cold boot...
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that being said, i think it probably needs a good overhaul (organic growth over 20 years can't be pretty to maintain)
you think 20 years is bad? You've got a few billion years of very organic growth in your own codebase, and it practically maintains itself, no overhauls required.
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There was a Solaris version, so an X11 based Unix version (as opposed to a Quartz based Unix version) is not so far fetched.
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Mac OS X can run UNIX applications, however it can also run a lot of other stuff that is totally incompatible with UNIX. There's nothing about it running on Mac OS X that makes it any easier to port it to UNIX.
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I'm not sure I would go there....
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This is why I've held on to my copy of PS6. Works great on lower end systems, and still has all of the useful tools.
It's surprising how subjective that statement is. I couldn't even imagine trying to use the brush engine from photoshop 6. I actually tried on a friend's old computer and gave up ten minutes later. PS7 has full vector fonts, which allow lossless resize and transform effects. There's more to be sure, but this is just off the top of my head.
A more accurate statement is that it still has all the tools that *you* find useful.
So Good It's a Tradition (Score:2)
Kudos photoshop. You know that you've done well with a piece of software when it turns into a verb.
It's more than a verb, for some people it's a tradition and art form [somethingawful.com]*. Had there been no Photoshop, something would have probably filled the void but it's definitely one of the (expensive) standards around.
*Yeah, I know you see a link to Something Awful and are thinking "not gonna click that!" but it's just the Photoshop Phriday main page, a site like the Onion that briefly brightens my week.
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Most of Something Awful's Photoshop Phriday is a kindergartner scribbling in the margins compared to what is regularly posted by top competitors on worth1000.
But how many bought a copy? (Score:4, Interesting)
Thought not.
Apart from MS Office, it has to be the most pirated bit of software in the world.
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Thought not.
Apart from MS Office, it has to be the most pirated bit of software in the world.
No doubt you're right but not only do I own a copy (not the latest version, but it's legal), I also have a floppy disk with Macintosh version 1.0 on it around here somewhere. Hard to believe, I know, but at one time Photoshop fit on a single 1.44 MB floppy.
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A verb? It’s worse. What I’ve seen:
Photoshop -> to photoshop / photoshopped -> to ’shop / shopped -> to shoop -> and then there is this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l2yjhHdDjYo [youtube.com]
But the File Format Sucks. :) (Score:2, Insightful)
"At this point, I'd like to take a moment to speak to you about the Adobe PSD format. PSD is not a good format. PSD is not even a bad format. Calling it such would be an insult to other bad formats, such as PCX or JPEG..." [google.com]
And while we're at it, I have to say: Can we please be done with the idea that web mockups should be done in Photoshop? It never was a good tool for designing web layouts. The idea that it ever was is an artifact of its market position and the popularity of certain raster effects at the t
On Fireworks (Score:3, Insightful)
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Please do not suggest Gimp or PSP.
Perhaps inkscape [inkscape.org] is the GPL'd vector image editor you seek.
On topic: Everyone, please cease mentioning that Photoshop went to pot with the CS namechange, lest Adobe pulls a Comcast-esque rebranding.
Inkscape is great (Score:2)
Perhaps inkscape is the GPL'd vector image editor you seek.
Inkscape is great. I'm still happier to pay to use Fireworks for a variety of other reasons, but if Inkscape suddenly became the weapon of choice for web mockups instead of Photoshop, I'd be delighted.
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Come on, I really don't get why Adobe does not finance Wine support for its products. Shouldn't be too expensive. The advantage of Linux is that it runs on super-computers.
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The fact that there's any need for Adobe to support Wine says more about Wine than Adobe.
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Development is paid by those who see a business opportunity or are otherwise capable. Adobe applications are extremely complex, so it would be expensive to start support from scratch but now it looks like Wine development grows into something reasonable. Developer time is limited, so need to hire comeone to get it done. Peanuts for Abobe and you get the Linux platform for your products which makes a whole lot of sense.
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What I mean is: Here are the current Adobe results [winehq.org] for Wine AppDb and here the Wine wiki [winehq.org]. Wine developers do not specialise on Adobe products and have no access to the source code. It is just a matter of investment to kill the Adobe bugs and get platinum rating for the applications. And then you can really use Linux powered clusters and workstations for rendering. I mean, Windows machines have more limitations for professionals. In the high end production environment you need really fast machines with huge
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What other software has become a verb? Most archive formats have been verbed, zip, rar, etc. Grep, of course, is a verb. If networked software counts, Google would be one. Blast (from NCBI) is often used as a verb too.
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Photoshop anniversary contest suggestion (Score:5, Funny)
Photoshopping photos over 20 years old to show people using Photoshop. Then claim they are legit. "Photoshop is over 20 years old, you can clearly see here they were using it during the Civil War!"
Nostalgia (Score:2, Insightful)
Sometimes I really miss photoshop 5.5.
7.0 was also pretty good. Things started to go down hill when they switched to the cs moniker
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These get grafted on to Photoshop with the idea that they are just flashy and / or important enough to get people to upgrade. Thus, Photoshop CS(x) + 1 is born.
Then, t
This must be fake. (Score:5, Funny)
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You are so lazy you don't want an easy +5 funny?
4chan (Score:5, Funny)
Well, actually, (Score:2)
Photoshop is only 10 years old. They photoshopped all the pictures to make it look like 20.
And also to give themselves more functional weapons of mass destruction. [boingboing.net]
May be a good time to discuss alternatives (Score:5, Interesting)
Not being a graphics designer, I never liked Photoshop which was too slow, bloated and complicated (and expensive) for my simple uses. In my Windows days, I first found Paint Shop Pro (of which I still have some prehistoric version somewhere), and finally ended up mostly using IrfanView and XnView, + occasionally PhotoFiltre.
While I'm sure Photoshop is a fantastic program for professionals, let's try a list of things normal users (like myself) mainly need in a graphics program:
- Rotate (losslessly for Jpeg)
- Resize
- Crop
- Print
- Convert to another format (Save as)
- Adjust brightness, contrast, white balance
Then maybe
- Edit metadata (Jpeg comments, Exif description, maybe IPTC tags)
- rarely convert a color scan to black and white.
- and maybe once or twice a year add something on a picture like text or a circle etc.
Obviously, Photoshop is really too much for this.
For Windows users, I know what to recommend (usually XnView; + PhotoFiltre if needed)
But I still don't know what to use on my Ubuntu desktop which has been my main machine for over 6 months. The Gimp feels just like Photoshop: too heavy and complicated (though the price is fine), and all the others I tried too limited (gThumb and the like). Is there a gem I missed somewhere?
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I just want to see an updated run of Jasc Paintshop 6. Basic photoediting capabilities without getting rid of the "traditional" paint functions. Gimp and Photoshop are too complicated.
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For this, I use Paint.NET [paint.net] on Windows.
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That's the wrong website, but they were kind enough to point me in the right direction.
you screwed the Earl (Score:2)
you ALSO screwed the Earl (Score:2)
Your correction needs a correction.
It's www.getpaint.net [getpaint.net].
If you're going to be annoyed by someone's mistake, try not to annoy others with your mistake.
- not annoyed.
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Me too, the only thing I miss is the airbrush tool.
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XnView is being ported. Beta versions:
http://www.xnview.com/en/downloadunix.html [xnview.com]
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Yeah, I can't possibly imagine why anyone would want a GUI when manipulating images...
I have RSI you insensitive clod! ;)
Re:May be a good time to discuss alternatives (Score:5, Informative)
I've had a lot of luck with Krita [krita.org].
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Re:May be a good time to discuss alternatives (Score:5, Informative)
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Personally, I use IrfanView for most of that stuff. It can even use Photoshop plugins, I believe.
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F-spot does all those things and more in a non-destructive fashion (meaning you can always undo) and comes with every Ubuntu install. Try it out.
Photoshop is amazing (Score:3, Interesting)
I had similar views to yours. Then I happened to get a summer job working for a desktop publisher and so had to use photoshop. I won't claim to be an expert - and I'm awfully rusty now - but you can do very awesome things in Photoshop extremely easily if you happen to have spent a large number of hours learning how. Yes, Photoshop is hard to _learn_ but it is very easy to use.
You say that ordinary users just need to , adjust brightness etc.but I don't think this is true. Ordinary users want to tune up th
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Very true. For those of us who make our money in print production, Photoshop is (unfortunately) absolutely necessary and an amazing tool. The program's abilities really are infinitely deep.
However, for 95% of the people out there, Photoshop is like driving a Ferrari a mile to get milk: lots of snorting, engine noise and wheelspin but, in the end, a lot of wasted effort.
This leads to another problem: because I spend all my image editing time in Photoshop, I have no idea what to recommend to people who need t
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Obligatory XKCD Refence (Score:5, Funny)
http://xkcd.com/331/ [xkcd.com]
Obligatory Achewood Reference (Score:2)
Re:Obligatory XKCD Refence (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm starting to think Slashdot is just an index for xkcd.
Photoshop and open source (Score:2)
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I think that says more about the quality of the open source programs that it does about freedom ideals.
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You're assuming consumers are well-informed and always make rational choices.
The truth is that most people don't know what FOSS is and have difficulty comprehending how it can replace a thousands-per-license app. They think there's something magical about obscenely expensive "professional-grade" software and every wanna-be designer thinks it's the only app to use.
Instead of encouraging diversity in software people think it has to be Photoshop or Cubase or whatever people say is "professional".
GIMP seems to
Knoll family not just programming geniuses (Score:5, Interesting)
Sort of a weird feeling about it (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, I don't really advertise GIMP in my classes, but I do give extra credit to students who are willing to give it a try and write a review (they can also choose to try other software, like Aviary).
Anyway, it's nice of Adobe to keep improving Photoshop, but it's amazing how many millions of dollars have gone into this software, and it is still getting a bad rep for tons of crashes, expensive third-party plugins, weird bugs, etc.
Keyboard shortcuts are better than scroll wheels (Score:5, Interesting)
Out of curiosity, why would you use the scroll wheel to change a value? Most values like transparency or opacity can be quickly changed by hitting numbers on the keyboard. I'd much rather hit 5 to set the opacity of my brush to 50% rather than scroll half way through the spinner. To each their own but if you're using Photoshop all day, using a scroll wheel to change values seems terribly inefficient.
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I'd much rather hit 5 to set the opacity of my brush to 50% rather than scroll half way through the spinner.
That's reasonable, and I'd usually do the same. Hey, I'm a geek - sometimes I'm just not happy with the results until they're mathematically precise. However, artists (and sometimes I) don't always work that way, and will adjust values until "it looks right". If working with paints, they don't often mix 2.3mL of some shade of red with 1.45mL of a certain blue. Instead, they'll add a little more of one or the other until they're happy with the results. Well, same with computer graphics: they'll use a widget
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Oddly enough I started using the GIMP once I switched to Photoshop I found that it was much easier to do a lot of simple things... Where if I were to do it with the GIMP it would be a massive struggle.
Re:Sort of a weird feeling about it (Score:4, Insightful)
This shows why feature set alone isn't the main motivator for GIMP users. Some of them are just cheap; some of them want a portable graphics package; some are sick of dealing with licensing and activation pains; some have had bad experiences with Adobe customer support.
On the other end of the spectrum, I think, are full-out artistic types who view the issue of freedom as a vast battlefield upon which commercial interests can become the worst kind of double agents, often actively working to subvert the interests of the wider community in favor of extra profits.
I tend to lean this way myself, having worked on many marketing teams and now owning my own business. I'm more interested in my own mental and spiritual development and its application in the digital domain (tough as the going may be), and less interested in putting Deanna from Marketing in a new Lexus.
That can sound pretty fundamentalist, but many artistic-types really do need the extra room to breathe.
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Anyway, it's nice of Adobe to keep improving Photoshop, but it's amazing how many millions of dollars have gone into this software, and it is still getting a bad rep for tons of crashes...
Could you elaborate on this a bit? I work with Photoshop daily along with a large number of other people who do as well and stability is not one complaint I've heard. In fact, some of my illustrator friends have a bad habit of not saving often. Why Murphy's Law hasn't taught them a lesson about that I"ll never know.
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Really? No beachballs of death at least? Anyway, for all I know you're just cropping images all day. My students are typically doing work that acquaints them with more advanced features -- even if they're not totally necessary -- so perhaps that's where the difference comes in.
So it's just your illustrator frien
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Really? No beachballs of death at least? Anyway, for all I know you're just cropping images all day. My students are typically doing work that acquaints them with more advanced features -- even if they're not totally necessary -- so perhaps that's where the difference comes in.
Nah, no beachballs. And no, not image cropping. Matte painting, concept illustration, texture creation, etc. I'd say we all manage to frequent most of Photoshop's crannies. ;) I don't think the stylize functions are used often, maybe there's a difference there? I dunno. That's the problem with Photoshop, too mainstream, too many different uses. It must be painful for them to figure out what sort of functionality to focus on.
So it's just your illustrator friends who have stability problems?
Erm did I phrase that badly? No, they don't have stability issues, hence they
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That's interesting — I actually find Gimp's user interface pretty hard to use, and that seems to be the most common reason for not switching to it. I wonder if GIMP isn't designed by and for advanced users who've outgrown Photoshop!
Re:Sort of a weird feeling about it (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyway, it's nice of Adobe to keep improving Photoshop, but it's amazing how many millions of dollars have gone into this software, and it is still getting a bad rep for tons of crashes, expensive third-party plugins, weird bugs, etc.
It's also surprising how little the UI has changed over 20 years. If you look at the screenshots going all the way back, you don't see a whole lot of change. I guess you could argue either way: either the UI is stagnant, or it was so well designed in the first place that it didn't need to change.
As far as "tons of crashes", I'm not with you on that one. I haven't really upgraded to CS4 and I don't use any 3rd party plugins, but Photoshop is pretty solid to me. I don't see lots of weird bugs either. Expensive third-party plugins? I don't see how that's really Adobe's fault unless they're somehow setting the price through deals that I'm not aware of.
What I find a little more annoying is the feeling of being on the upgrade treadmill. Here's my petty little rant (don't read it if you don't want to read a petty little rant): I had a copy of CS2 for OSX, but felt a little railroaded into CS3 because I had to upgrade to get Intel support. Meh, that's understandable, but kind of annoying. Now Snow Leopard comes out, and they say they won't really support CS3 on Snow Leopard. Ok, that's annoying, but not a big deal-- CS3 still works. But I go to reinstall CS3 recently, and it's kind of annoying-- they dropped CS3 trialware completely off their website. You can upgrade directly from the trial to the full version using a credit card, I hadn't kept an electronic copy around. I finally get it installed, and Adobe's Updater won't work. The Updater needs to be updated first, and it won't work well enough to update itself. You can download the Updater from their website, but they try to push you to use the CS4 Updater. The CS4 Updater won't update CS3 software. So it basically takes me a day and a half of hunting around online before I find an update to the old CS3 Updater online. I install it, and it updates Adobe Acrobat from 8.1 and stops. I run the Updater again, and it upgrades to Acrobat 8.1.2 and stops. Run it again, 8.1.3. Then 8.1.4. It keeps going like this until I hit... I don't know... 8.2.1 or whatever the most recent version is. I'm sitting there thinking, "I paid something like $1,500 for this, and they can't make this all easier?" Then I realize, "No, they don't want to make it easier. They want me to get frustrated and just buy the upgrade to CS4."
Stupid editor mistakes (Score:4, Insightful)
In February of 1990, Adobe 1.0 was released.
You'd think that in an article on Photoshop, they wouldn't make the irritating novice mistake of conflating "Adobe" (the company) with "Photoshop" (the product). I expect this from the idiots where I work, where complaints of "my Adobe isn't working!" are common, but from them?
Or should we say... (Score:4, Funny)
What version started requiring a mortgage? (Score:4, Insightful)
A full version of Photoshop CS4 costs more than a cheap second hand car. Elements is cheaper but crippled in ways that make it much less useful even for a casual amateur. You use to be able to get around those restrictions up to Elements 2.0. Now Elements is a very different piece of software (ironically with some unique features of its own). Photoshop is wonderful, but it's a pity it's either inaccessible or pirated for a great many people. It's probably more pirated than Windows.
Gimp vs. PS (Score:2)
What PS has what GIMP does not have?
Re:Gimp vs. PS (Score:5, Funny)
What PS has what GIMP does not have?
A grammar check?
Whoops (Score:2)
Am I the only one who finds it ironic that an article on Photoshop has such low-quality screenshots? Most, if not all of them, are JPEG's, and almost all of them have been badly rescaled down (and a few of them down then up again).
--- Mr. DOS
Still have Photoshop on floppy disks (Score:2)
For me though I think Photoshop 6 was the first time I really got into it and to be quite honest it's still one of my favourite versions. PS 7 was awful, imo.
Every Web Designer? (Score:4, Insightful)
Photoshop has been a part of every web designer's life since they picked up their first mouse.
Say what? Why does a web designer even need a high-end graphics editor? Unless, of course, he's running an art web site. Or he's one of those really inept designers who doesn't understand the difference between print design and web design.
ignores prior work (Score:4, Informative)
The article leaves out quite a bit of the history of digital paint programs. This article [google.com] contains a good summary (although it also leaves out yet other work).
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Most likely, but given that Linux itself doesn't turn 20 'til next year, I'd say there's still a long way until then.
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Eh 6 years isn't that long
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There is an article about the GIMP every time it farts.
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Gimp is not nearly as important in the world of free software as Photoshop is in the proprietary one. 25 years of vi, that's a milestone.
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Gimp is not nearly as important in the world of free software as Photoshop is in the proprietary one. 25 years of vi, that's a milestone.
So both unimportant then...
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You're just saying that to obscure your interest in counterfeiting.
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For my pea sized brain, that is a good thing (TM). the fact that I'm comfortable in photoshop is driven home every time I try to use the GIMP. I rally want the GIMP to be successful, but my brain has been bent into the adobe way of doing things, and I'm a lost cause.
All you need to do is see someone with good photoshop skills (think professional, rather than a dabbler like me), and you'll see why adobe has kept the UI largely unchanged. The keyboard shortcuts and pallet and tool placement becomes second
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They're damned if they do and damned if they don't. People said that about Microsoft Office (it really hadn't changed its UI much in over a decade), then they released Office 2007 and everyone screamed bloody murder because the interface was overhauled.
Photoshop isn't the simplest program in existence to pick up and use, but I'm of the persuasion that if the interface was *that* terrible that Adobe would have, at some point, done an Office 2007 ribbon-esque revamp, but my graphic designer friends give me th
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The truth is that the mac and Apple is often is one of the first to get truly revolutionary enabling applications. Think Visicalc. [...]
You're right about Photoshop and Excel but VisiCalc was originally written for the Apple II. Afterwards, versions were developed for the Atari, Commodore PET, TRS-80 and IBM PC but there never was a version for the Mac.
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I think the key was in his use of the words "mac and Apple".
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What does Microsoft have to do with anything. Seriously - Microsoft doesn't need anyone cheerleading for them (even now, I'm sure they could buy and sell photoshop in their sleep), and it's not like Photoshop directly competes with them on anything (except maybe the wareze scene?). So, where the fuck did that comparison even come from?
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Now, please, tell me exactly which of those items is bloatware? Just because *YOU* don't know what something is for, does not mean it has no reason for bei
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Probably because the rate of features being added hasn't slowed down but the rate of processor performance increases has slowed significantly.