May 28, 2008 10:12 AM PDT

Adobe offers sneak peek of CS4 apps

Adobe Systems is offering two-day trials of three beta applications from its next Creative Suite package.

The previews of Dreamweaver for Web design, Fireworks for image editing, and Soundbooth for audio editing became available Monday.

Trials expire after 48 hours for most people, but registered CS3 users get to keep using the CS4 betas until the final applications replace them.

Adobe hasn't publicly confirmed its planned shipping date or the name for the next Creative Suite, which we're nicknaming CS4. Adobe Creative Suite 3 was released in March 2007.

We took a quick test drive of the Dreamweaver trial and liked some of the changes. Among the touted enhancements are a Related Files Toolbar and Code Navigator. The Properties panel integrates HTML and CSS coding, which could save time for those who edit dynamic sites. A new Live View Mode, driven by Webkit open-source rendering, previews pages within Dreamweaver, eliminating the need to open a browser. Adobe intends for this feature to make it easier to debug JavaScript as well as to work with Flash animation.

The interface of Fireworks, originally from Macromedia, finally resembles those of other applications in the Creative Suite. Fireworks features compatibility with Adobe's AIR, Flash, and Flex Builder as well as HTML. And users can export design mockups as high fidelity, interactive, and secure Adobe PDF files.

Soundbooth adds support for multiple track editing as well as volume matching across audio files. Users can preview the compression settings before saving MP3s. Speech recognition is supposed to enable quick, searchable transcripts of dialog content.

There's no word yet on whether the next rough draft of Photoshop will be available for a free trial. However, Photoshop's next iteration may become available in widgets, enabling users to mix and mash up some features with third-party content, according to a blog post last week by Photoshop product manager John Nash. We suspect that there will be more opportunities to blur the lines between the desktop, the Web, and mobile platforms within the next Creative Suite.

System requirements for the Windows trials demand a machine running XP or Vista with at least 512MB of RAM, 1 gigabyte of disk space, and a Pentium 4 processor. Mac users must have OS X version 10.4.11 or later on a PowerPC G5 or Intel-based system. Soundbooth, however, won't run on a PowerPC Mac.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 5 comments
by Mr. Dee May 28, 2008 1:32 PM PDT
Well, volume license customers of Adobe software should be jumping with joy. But I wonder how the freelance graphics pro's taking the news? Especially with word of CS5 also in planning, this news should really have a lot of persons in the design community on edge, especially if you use a Mac.
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by gente21 June 3, 2008 2:59 PM PDT
Believe me, I love Adobe products but the worst one of them all is Fireworks, i already tried the CS4 beta and believe or not.... It's even SLOWER than the CS3 version!!!! AAAAAAMAIZING!, it even uses more memory. Oh I gues i'll buy Photoshop.
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by Gack June 15, 2008 9:31 PM PDT
Check out episode 7 of this one:

http://www.youtube.com/user/adobe1wannabe

I think there is a secret massege hidden in it. Notice the letters in the background and the telephone voice at the end.
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by benjaminstraight July 24, 2008 3:08 PM PDT
Word is that CS4 is slower.
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by Savophoto August 26, 2008 6:23 PM PDT
I'm a little worried with the quality assurance of future adobe products. CS3 is only a year old and some change. It seems as if adobe is building fame for quickness and not detail. I own the masters collection and I couldn't be happier with my purchase. However, If CS4's requirements are so demanding and companies require updated training in the latest software; what's the point if it takes longer with a new product than with an old one. I rather work with someone is proficient in Adobe photoshop 7.1 and timely than someone proficient in CS4 but takes twice as long to develop a final product.
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