
Enhanced crop tool with straighten option.Color Range: skin tone and face detection.Blur Gallery includes Tilt Shift, Iris and Field that can be used to create depth of field effects.Content-aware Patch and Move tools (extensions of content-aware fill introduced in previous version).UI redesign (all new icons and optional dark UI).As of January 9, 2017, Creative Suite ( CS6 or earlier) perpetual license applications such as Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Premiere Pro, and Adobe After Effects were no longer available for sale from Adobe. Template:= Template:= CS6, CS6 Extended (13.0) CS6, CS6 Extended (13.0) Script error: No such module "ustring". Template:= Template:= Script error: No such module "ustring". Last release for Windows Vista RTM and Mac OS X Leopard on PowerPC Macs.First release to be distributed in DVD format.ImageReady functions directly integrated into Photoshop and no longer a separate application.More complete 32 bit / HDR support (layers, painting, more filters and adjustments).
Alterations to Curves, Vanishing Point, Channel Mixer, Brightness and Contrast, and the Print dialog. Native support for the Intel-based Macintosh platform and improved support for Windows Vista. Universal Mac OS X, Windows XP SP2 or later Template:= Template:= CS3, CS3 Extended (10.0) CS3, CS3 Extended (10.0) Script error: No such module "ustring". Forever.Template:= Template:= Script error: No such module "ustring". Sounds like a strong means of forcing the industry to a software-as-a-service model: you don't buy anything, and can't transfer anything to a new PC. Alternately, every ISV would be required to support their Windows software forever, at no additional charge. It might be less expensive for Microsoft than being required to maintain perpetual compatibility of their OS with every piece of software ever written for Windows by every independent software vendor. (I don't recall whether that applied to the "official" builds, 70.) There are forums at Adobe that may be a better source of information about their products: (Irony mode ON.) Perhaps Microsoft should be funding upgrades to all software broken by changing to new Microsoft operating systems. CS3 was supported under Vista, but it wouldn't install on some of the Win7 betas. (I need to use the 32 bit version with my scanner, for example.) I have never tried Photoshop CS2 on Win7. (The 64 bit version cannot use 32 bit plugins, so there's another opportunity to spend more money.) Both are installed, and I can run either version as necessary. I partially justified the upgrade because it includes a 64 bit version, that can use a lot more RAM than the 32 bit application. It seems to work well, although Adobe doesn't support it on that OS. I use Photoshop CS4 standard on Win7 X64.