<![CDATA[Gizmodo: photoshop express]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: photoshop express]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/photoshopexpress http://gizmodo.com/tag/photoshopexpress <![CDATA[Photoshop Express Gets Flickr Support]]> As promised, Adobe's online Photoshop-branded photo re-toucher now has full Flickr support and integration. Fix your photos, automatically dump 'em to Flickr. [Photoshop Express]

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<![CDATA[Adobe Relinquishes Ownership of Photos Uploaded to Photoshop Express]]> So, one of the big sniggles about Photoshop Express, Adobe's free online photo tweaker and sorta-kinda Flickr clone, is that using the service basically gave full control of your photos to Adobe. No more! They just emailed us that as of April 10, they're only claiming "those limited rights that allow us to operate the service" and they don't "claim ownership of your content and won't sell your images." Score one for internet rights and your mom's Photoshop dalliances. [PS Express Terms of Use]

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<![CDATA[Photoshop Express Beta Coming This Year]]> Adobe will roll out the beta version of its Photoshop Express online app by the end of 2007 and release the final version in 2008. [Crave]

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<![CDATA[Photoshop Goes Online and Free]]> While it's still a teaser at the moment, John Nack (senior product manager for Photoshop) has confirmed the development of Photoshop Express. It's a free online photo editor that's not meant to replace Adobe's current offerings, but "make Adobe imaging technology immediately accessible to large numbers of people." And from the screenshot here you can tell it's not even a dumbed- down Photoshop, but an entirely new product (that reminds us of something from the new iLIfe).

The announcement follows Adobe's implementation of Premiere Express, their online video editor, and it signifies a fairly progressive market plan by Adobe. In a content creation culture where every teen is a video editor, the democratization of powerful multimedia tools online allows Adobe to reach out to this new generation without abandoning their industry professional bread and butter. And it makes us want to remind kids that we once edited a movie on a VCR (after walking 30 miles barefoot in the snow, aiming our kite for lightning to capture the electricity to do our work). [adobe]

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