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September 7, 2007 5:52 AM PDT

Adobe gives peek at online Photoshop

by Martin LaMonica
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Photoshop Express, Adobe's online image editor

(Credit: Adobe)

With a new product called Photoshop Express, Adobe Systems is coming through on its promise to deliver a lightweight online version of Photoshop.

At the Photoshop World conference on Thursday in Las Vegas, John Loiacono, senior vice president of Adobe's Creative Solutions Business Unit, briefly demonstrated Photoshop Express and gave some details on how it is intended to work.

In February, Adobe CEO Bruce Chizen told CNET News.com that the company was planning an online version of Photoshop for release within three to six months. Chizen said the product was meant to appeal to consumers and to compete with free and other low-end image-editing tools, such as Google's Picasa.

The product is aimed at consumers rather than professional photographers and is designed to complement existing products Photoshop Creative Suite 3 and Photoshop Elements, according to company executives.

"It's a new member of the Photoshop family that's meant to make Adobe imaging technology immediately accessible...to large numbers of people," Photoshop product manager John Nack wrote in a blog posting Thursday.

Nack said that Adobe Photoshop Express is a Flash application that runs in a browser and that it is still in development.

"Loiacono showed that it was possible to adjust an image just by rolling over the different versions shown at the top, previewing the results & then clicking the desired degree of modification," Nack wrote.

In a press release issued Thursday, Adobe said that the product is in development, but gave no indication when it would be available. A company representative on Friday said Adobe won't be releasing any additional details at this time.

Earlier this year, Adobe released Premiere Express, a Flash-based online image editor that it offers through third-party sites, including Photobucket. In February, Chizen said that Adobe could offer its online version of Photoshop directly to consumers or through photo-sharing sites.

Originally posted at News Blog
Martin LaMonica is a senior writer for CNET's Green Tech blog. He started at CNET News in 2002, covering IT and Web development. Before that, he was executive editor at IT publication InfoWorld. E-mail Martin.
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finally
by groovyd September 7, 2007 12:00 PM PDT
that was my idea...

just like internet telephone...

that was my idea too...
Reply to this comment
I invented the wheel
by t8 September 9, 2007 4:32 PM PDT
The wheel was my idea.
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Interesting...
by alan_06 September 10, 2007 3:22 AM PDT
Very keen to try it out and see how it differs from other flash image editors...

You can actually design a nice online Image editor using Flash frontend, PHP and ImageMagick backend.

I'm hopinge the online version is not just limited to some basic touchups. Otherwise, there are loads of free image editors that can be used offline.
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