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Adobe
Unveils Lightroom Public Beta and Delivers New
Technology for Digital Photography Workflows
Professional Photographers Instrumental in
Developing New Modular Software to Import,
Manage, Develop, and Showcase Images
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Jan. 9, 2006 — Adobe Systems
Incorporated (Nasdaq:ADBE) today introduced the
public beta of Adobe® Lightroom™, an all-new
digital imaging solution for professional
photographers. With its modular, task-based and
streamlined environment, Lightroom's goal is to
deliver a complete photography workflow. As
Adobe collects more feedback from photographers,
modules and feature sets will likely change, as
customers decide on their popularity and
priority within digital photography workflows.
Initially available as a beta for Macintosh,
Lightroom will later support both the Windows®
and Macintosh platforms.
"We first showed an early version of Lightroom
at the Adobe Ideas Conference in April 2005 to
demonstrate a new streamlined digital
photography experience, from capture to print,"
said Shantanu Narayen, president and chief
operating officer of Adobe. "Today's Lightroom
Beta leverages Adobe's renowned digital imaging
innovation, in areas such as raw image
processing, so that even in beta form
photographers will find world class technology
that complements Photoshop. We look forward to
the feedback from the photography community as
we refine the product over the next few months."
New Open Architecture Focuses on the Image
Lightroom Beta has been designed with a radical
new user interface that puts the focus on what
photographers really care about: the image. With
just one click, the control panels and tools
fade into the background in Lights-Out mode,
allowing the image to take center stage. The
innovative Identity Plate feature allows
photographers to apply their own branding to the
application and its output, so that it becomes
their own personal gallery for showcasing work.
Photographers also can rapidly scroll through
hundreds of images and Quick One-to-One Zoom
allows instant magnification of the finer points
within the image.
"Lightroom defines the future workflow for the
professional digital photographer," said Seth
Resnick, a premier corporate, editorial and
stock photographer. "It delivers exactly the
functions photographers need to speed up their
workflow in a way that was never before
possible."
High-Quality Raw Processing
Leveraging industry-leading Adobe Camera Raw
technology, Lightroom supports over 100 cameras
and incorporates raw conversion into a single
workflow experience. Adobe continues to advance
the state of the art in raw processing, as
evidenced by the new split-toning controls which
create richer black and white images. This
extends photographers' creative control,
providing new parameters for making adjustments
and more freedom to address precise areas of the
photograph on the histogram. Upon import, files
can be converted to Digital Negative format (DNG)
or renamed and segmented by folder or date.
Images can also be showcased via slideshows with
drop shadows, borders, Identity Plates and
different colored backgrounds. The size and
position of the images can be manipulated and
delivered in Macromedia Flash®, Adobe Portable
Document Format (PDF) or HTML formats. A variety
of templates are offered for contact sheets with
the ability to add identity plates or produce a
fine art print.
Pricing and Availability
The public debut of Lightroom Beta for Macintosh
OSX 10.4.3 will occur at Macworld 2006 on
January 10, 2006 in San Francisco at Booth #1307
and is available for free download from the
Adobe Labs Web site at
http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/lightroom
. Recommended system requirements are Macintosh
OSX 10.4.3, 1 GHz PowerPC G4 processor, 768 MB
RAM and a 1024x768 resolution screen. Regular
updates to the software will be posted on the
site, feedback will be collected and the final
product is expected to be introduced in late
2006. Further details around pricing, system
requirements and availability have yet to be
determined. |