Acrobat 5 is fairly fast and light. Run well under MacOS X Panther. Most of its job is done without using "sci-fi features" I currently use both the Mac and Win version and got no problem at all. Acrobat 6 - as, for all I can see, the whole CS series - is heavy and slow (on a 1,25 Mhz G4 with 1 gig of RAM). Unless one needs some very high level feature, is better to stay sticked to the previous version.
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Acrobat 5 is fairly fast and light. Run well under MacOS X Panther. Most of its job is done without using "sci-fi features" I currently use both the Mac and Win version and got no problem at all. Acrobat 6 - as, for all I can see, the whole CS series - is heavy and slow (on a 1,25 Mhz G4 with 1 gig of RAM). Unless one needs some very high level feature, is better to stay sticked to the previous version.
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Acrobat 5 is fairly fast and light. Run well under MacOS X Panther. Most of its job is done without using "sci-fi features" I currently use both the Mac and Win version and got no problem at all. Acrobat 6 - as, for all I can see, the whole CS series - is heavy and slow (on a 1,25 Mhz G4 with 1 gig of RAM). Unless one needs some very high level feature, is better to stay sticked to the previous version.
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Acrobat 5 is fairly fast and light. Run well under MacOS X Panther. Most of its job is done without using "sci-fi features" I currently use both the Mac and Win version and got no problem at all. Acrobat 6 - as, for all I can see, the whole CS series - is heavy and slow (on a 1,25 Mhz G4 with 1 gig of RAM). Unless one needs some very high level feature, is better to stay sticked to the previous version.
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Acrobat 5 is fairly fast and light. Run well under MacOS X Panther. Most of its job is done without using "sci-fi features" I currently use both the Mac and Win version and got no problem at all. Acrobat 6 - as, for all I can see, the whole CS series - is heavy and slow (on a 1,25 Mhz G4 with 1 gig of RAM). Unless one needs some very high level feature, is better to stay sticked to the previous version.
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Acrobat 5 is fairly fast and light. Run well under MacOS X Panther. Most of its job is done without using "sci-fi features" I currently use both the Mac and Win version and got no problem at all. Acrobat 6 - as, for all I can see, the whole CS series - is heavy and slow (on a 1,25 Mhz G4 with 1 gig of RAM). Unless one needs some very high level feature, is better to stay sticked to the previous version.
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Adobe production premium has been so useful to me. I have leant so much from it and just want to say get it. It truly is worth the money.
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I had been using Photodeluxe 2.0 for many years, after receiving the software bundled with a printer. I found that 2.0 was giving me problems with XP however, so I recently purchased 4.0 Home Edition. The basic functionality is similar to the earlier version, but the interface and some of the tools have been updated, plus the web and e-mail features have been added. Unlike 2.0, the software has shown no glitches on XP at all. I haven't tried Vista yet, but I would not expect this to be a problem.
I can thoroughly recommend 4.0 as a simple to use, but really powerful editing toolkit - the smartselect, clone and re-touch features particularly allow even a new user to soon be adept at fixing images and producing creative products. ... Read More:
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I was surprised at the 3 start average rating for CS3 - however I note it had a lot of bugs.
I've been using it now for 2 weeks and as of July 2008 it does appear many of the bugs are now fixed. Photoshop itself has never crashed - though Bridge has crashed a couple of times - but that's still quite a rare event.
What made the upgrade worthwhile for me, an amateur photographer, are the new enhanced RAW image processing facilities, the big improvements to Bridge and the smart selection tool which makes selecting complex objects very easy.
Definately worth the upgrade if your a photographer.
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I was surprised at the 3 start average rating for CS3 - however I note it had a lot of bugs.
I've been using it now for 2 weeks and as of July 2008 it does appear many of the bugs are now fixed. Photoshop itself has never crashed - though Bridge has crashed a couple of times - but that's still quite a rare event.
What made the upgrade worthwhile for me, an amateur photographer, are the new enhanced RAW image processing facilities, the big improvements to Bridge and the smart selection tool which makes selecting complex objects very easy.
Definately worth the upgrade if your a photographer.
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