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Post by account_disabled on Sept 16, 2023 10:27:25 GMT
Chromebook, I want to love you. I'm serious. It already maintains a good relationship with your siblings, Chrome for Windows and Android smartphones. You can work together all day without any problems. I admire the achievements Chromebooks have made over the past few years. I think I am taking good care of myself. But there is one thing that continues Phone Number List to stand between us. This is why I keep frowning and turning away every time I try to switch to simple Chrome OS and cheaper hardware. Chromebook, not your problem. The problem is Photoshop. I have been using Chrome OS ever since its launch. I always seem to carry at least one Chrome OS-based laptop or tablet to keep things fresh. And I've always desperately wanted to install Photoshop in some way, shape, or form. As a journalist and reviewer for the IT media, I need a powerful image editor as part of my daily workflow, whether to create simple header images or organize numerous review photos. But I want to make it clear that you want Photoshop, not another versatile image editor. I have been using Adobe Photoshop for over 20 years, ever since I took a desktop publishing class in high school, and I especially know how to use Photoshop's editing functions very quickly and efficiently. Anyone who has ever memorized complex keyboard shortcuts only to have them all changed in a competing program will understand. Web-based app? The easiest way to install or introduce Chrome OS is to replace it with a clone. There are several web-based image editors that somewhat mimic Photoshop's functionality and work great as web apps on Chromebooks. The one I use most is Photopea, an editor that clearly aspires to be a web-based Photoshop.
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