
For all you graphics geeks who have been waiting eagerly to find out whether or not Adobe has screwed up all of your favorite Macromedia design tools, now's your chance to plunk down $1,000+ to find out. CS3 launches today, and it's as freakin' thorough as expected. You can buy Design Premium for $1,799, Design Standard for $1,199, Web Premium for $1,599 and Web Standard for $999. Also available are separately wrapped apps: Adobe Photoshop CS3, Adobe Photoshop CS3 Extended, Adobe InDesign CS3, Adobe Illustrator CS3, Adobe Flash CS3 Professional, Adobe Dreamweaver CS3, Adobe Fireworks CS3, and Adobe Contribute CS3.
If you've been holding out on buying a new system, Adobe says go ahead: All of the programs run as Universal apps for both PowerPC Macs and their Intel-based successors, with some significant speed improvement there. Adobe also says that you get a speed boost running CS3 on the latest Windows hardware.
Follow the jump to see CS3's new scary clown mascot plus some extra specs...

Crazy list of features:
•Experiment with, save, and apply color combinations quickly and intuitively using the new Live Color feature in Illustrator
•Perform image editing tasks such as selecting image areas, compositing images, and applying filters faster and more flexibly with Photoshop CS3 Extended
•Master Flash more easily thanks to its new Adobe-standard user interface
•Repurpose print content on the Web by exporting InDesign CS3 documents as XHTML and the modifying them in Dreamweaver CS3 using CSS
•Import native Photoshop and Illustrator files directly into Flash and Fireworks with full fidelity
•New Spry Framework for AJAX, a pre-built, cross-browser compatible library of widgets and effects that make it faster and easier to build rich, interactive websites
•Fireworks CS3 boasts new workflows for rapidly prototyping RIA layouts for websites and Web applications, intelligent Photoshop and Illustrator integration, and a library of common and customizable graphics assets
•Updated version of Adobe Bridge CS3, the hub of Adobe Creative Suite, which provides instant access to Version Cue CS3, Acrobat Connect and an expanded Adobe Stock Photos service
Click here for even more info.
Adobe CS3 [Gizmodo]













Comments
I need to upgrade my iBook to a gig of RAM just to run this!
I hope this means a price drop for CS2!
That clown is a very interesting design, but HOLY MACARONI is it terrifying!
Dear God I hope they haven't screwed up Flash...
Abandon all hope ye who use bloatware!
I've been reading some preliminary reviews and aside from Illustrator having some neat features, Photoshop Extended is a waste, and Flash is just new menu look. Thanks Adobe for certifying a monopoly on design software!
http://www.it-enquirer.com/main/ite/more/cs3/
The original titles for the new editions were better:
http://www.geekculture.com/joyoftech/joyarchives/942.html<...
flash has always been screwed up. Sounds like adobe has been working on unscrewing it up.
Their mascot makes me want to double down.
Personally, I like the Ms Paint version of this.
(AhAHAHAHAHahahHahAhhahaha) George Takei Laugh)
Still Have no clue if I need this...although faster filter stuff would be nice...
I'm looking forward to trying this new version of the greatest software tool ever (my piss ant opinion), if it sux I'll just cry and continue putting my friends heads on naked bodies with CS2.
So, whos gonna seed it on the piratebay?
Agreed, Flash has been a functional but busted product from day one... hopefully they can lead it to a more intuitive workflow, esp. across different Adobe apps... of course, I've spent almost 10 years getting used to the damn thing, and I'll probably be lost when they "fix" it.
But it would look so much nicer if you used CS3 to superimpose your friends heads on naked bodies.
Thank of all the filters and new tools you could use! xD
Don't you think the joker laughs at you? Ho ho ho, he he he, ha ha ha!
I haven't seen any sign they've fixed any of the flaws with the older versions.. just added a (remarkably small) number of new features.
I AM of the opinion that a mergerbetween the macromedia suite and the adobe one could prduce some awesome products.. but so far its been REALLY disappointing.
The interfaces for both companies had some good and bad points.. (due to stupid lawsuits between them) .. so i was hoping that we'd get a "best of both worlds" product. SO far we just seem to have a suite with FAR TOO MANY PRODUCTS, which all overlap, and which all have similar, but frustratingly different interfaces, tools and workflows.
And if there wasn't enough products ALREADY, they now go and start ading "extended" versions as well?? Sigh.
Looks like a monopoly was a bad idea after all...
oh, and why the heck can't they merge version cue and bridge (nd make bridge a useful hub product).
the only good thing seemed to be the SPRY ajax layer in Dreamweaver (which apparently looks just like DW8 and doesn'thave the same interface as the rest of the suite), but:
"A Spry Framework, of which www.webstandards.org in May 2006 said: "Sadly, at this initial stage it seems that the goal of ease-of-use has been held higher than even the most basic principles of valid markup and accessibility best practices. Opting to make implementation as simple as possible, Spry uses custom attributes and old-school obtrusive JavaScript techniques, welding the behaviour layer firmly to the content.","
why didn't they just use prototype or mootools or one of the other layers out there?
Having used Macromedia and Adobe quite heavily, I do really prefer Adobe's approach to usability. So shifting away from the Macromedia interface is fine by me. Hopefully there's going to be an Illustrator-like path system in Flash, the goofiest drawing system I've ever used.
@kodychamberlain. Looking at the Flash product page at adobe.com, it seems like they've finally ported over real drawing tools (a la Illustrator) to Flash.
I guess it's that time again; shelling out about $1,500 per system for them moving some menus around and telling me I will find it more user-friendly once I actually figure out where they moved it.
Pirate Bay, here I come!
Of course, some nutty Italian did it first:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giuseppe_Arcimboldo
I hear that the full Master Suite of CS3 includes a total of 22 software programs... which makes for possibly the largest single consumer software release in the history of software releases.
The question is, what does one person do with 22 software programs? I mean, criminy!
OMG it's a crackwhore Pennywise
HOw can anyone even LEARN how to use 22 software programmes simultaneously? (even if they all had common interfaces and tools).
I gotta say, i never really liked the Adobe interface. Macromedia wasn't much better, but adobe's interface always struck me as purposely obtuse and complex simply to make it a "pro" programme.
The thing i never liked about either of them was that you had o have FAR too many palettes open to get anythign done... and seemed to spend half your time rearranging, expanding or reducing palettes.
(and it always bugged me that tools with the same icon in illustrator did totally different things to the tools in photoshop.. but then i was alwys much more of a PS user.
I actually think some of the freeware alternatives have better interfaces (in places, non across the board, unfortunately). Heck.. I can't help butthink that even the new MS office has a better interface. (the properties panel in dreamweaver was always much more consistent and useful than the ones in adobe though.. as were a few of the toolbars.
I don't care what people say adobe is overpriced and they do not include any options for the in home basic user, i have cs2 and i torrented it so look out bitcommit here i come!
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