(Credit: Photoshop.com)
Adobe plans new options next week to give its
Photoshop.com a bigger social destination and to help the service stay in sync with people's computers.
Photoshop.com can be used to store, edit, and share photos, but today those activities happen largely in isolation. That will change November 11 as the company releases an AIR (Adobe Integrated Runtime) application called AIR Uploader that will let people synchronize photos stored on their own computers and on the online photography site, Adobe said.
Another change will let site members import address books from Google's Gmail, Microsoft's Hotmail, and Yahoo Mail so that photos can be sent to family members or other contacts more easily. And another social dimension will come with the ability to sign up to receive updates whenever contacts add new photos.
Photoshop.com is closely tied to Adobe's consumer-oriented photo and video software, Photoshop Elements and Premiere Elements, and the online site could mean extra revenue for Adobe if it takes off.
Next week, people who've bought the latest version 7 of those packages will get new Photoshop.com storage options: basic membership costs US$19.99 per year for 20 GB of storage, 40GB costs US$39.99, and 100GB costs US$99.99.
The higher-end Plus membership, which adds album templates and tutorials, costs US$49.99 annually for 20GB, US$69.99 for 40GB, and US$129.99 for 100GB. And for people who don't have the Elements software, online-only customers can buy storage at US$19.99 per year for 20 GB, US$39.99 for 40GB, and US$99.99 for 100GB.
Via
Underexposed blog at CNET News
To post comments, you need to become a member. It's FREE.