On
Monday September 29th 2014, Google's Chromebook just became a little
more useful for artists and Graphic Designers.
In
partnership with Adobe, Photoshop and
Adobe's suite of Graphic Products such as Dreamweaver will be streaming to your
Google Chromebook via the launch of their Adobe Creative Cloud as stated in the
article “Adobe
Creative Cloud Comes To Chromebooks With Photoshop”, published 9/30/2014 @
11:59PM by Dave Altavilla, Forbes and “Adobe Photoshop
Headed to Chromebooks”, published September 29, 2014 05:35pm EST By Angela
Moscaritolo, PC Magazine.
Google
Chrome
Blogspot post gives details of the project and Adobe Website post explains
the eligibility requirements for those lucky North Americans Education
customers with a paid Creative Cloud membership.
As
the Google Chrome
Blogspot post mentions, Adobe Photoshop
Streaming Edition will be a Cloud-only deal within the Google Chrome OS
Browser. No client installation on the computer in a manner similar to Google’s
Cloud based services, like Docs, Sheets, Gmail and Drive.
Because
it’s Cloud-based, it updates your work automatically in the Cloud each time you
work, accessible every time you log back in. It’ll be fairly easy to manage,
once you have Cable of Fiber Optic Broadband i.e. Verizon FiOS, AT&T U-Verse
or even Google Fiber, all of whom have been on an expansion run through the US
of A as noted in my blog article entitled
“Gig.U
Third Annual Report - Google Fiber's American Gigabit Internet Revolution as
Jamaica starts Broadband Internet Revolution”
Exclusively
for North Americans Education customers, the Adobe Creative Cloud comes with
Adobe Education Exchange learning content and a “Learn Now” In-app Panel.
Once
this goes mainstream though, a matter of upgrading their Cloud Drive Servers,
the Google Chromebook will be become as popular as the Apple Mac with Graphics Design
students as per the prediction in my blog article entitled
“Chromebooks
Sales to Triple by 2017 – How Rapid Sales Heaven for PC Makers means Apple iPad
and Microsoft Surface Pro 3 under attack”.
Just
go to the Adobe
Photoshop Streaming Edition Application page and try it out.
Here's
the link
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