Most relevant for photographers are Lightroom and Photoshop, with Acrobat (PDFs/online signing), Illustrator (vector graphics editor), Spark (visual storytelling), Portfolio (personalised websites) and various other apps being popular in the industry too. Adobe is also offering an education version for $30 a month.The Adobe Creative Cloud comprises multiple applications for photographers, video editors, designers and other creative professionals and enthusiasts. Additionally, you can step up to a $69.99/month subscription on Creative Cloud (aimed at organizations) to get “Apple Genius Bar”-like support features on Adobe’s apps. The service will start at $49.99/month for individual users and includes all of Adobe’s touch apps (available on iOS and Android), 20GB of cloud storage, and Adobe Business Catalyst for publishing and hosting up to five different websites. Scott Morris, Senior Marketing Director at Adobe, said the company considered Creative Cloud to be “the next step in the evolution of Creative Suite.” In the same way that at launch, Creative Suite revolutionized Adobe’s pricing scheme and allowed users to purchase a bundle of apps for a much cheaper cost than making individual (and expensive) purchases for each app, subscribing to Creative Cloud opens the door to the complete collection of CS6 apps – including such familiar titles as Photoshop, InDesign, Illustrator, Premiere Pro, DreamWeaver – along with real-time updates for each app as soon as they’re pushed out by Adobe. Creative Cloud also includes a number of features that aren't in CS6: Typekit, which makes sure the each font you use is safe for viewing online Edge, an app that produces output in HTML5 instead of Flash and Muse, which designers can use to make layouts for their websites.
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