No but they colaborate. Photoshop have more features but Lightroom have better cappabilities for photographers.
Adobe is the program owner while the photoshop is the program that runs on any computer it is loaded on, including iMac & MacBooks.
The average price of Adobe Photoshop CS4 is $1299. The software package is available from several online retailers for this same price with varying shipping costs offered.
Adobe Photoshop CS3 is most user friendly but if you use any of the version of adobe Photoshop then you will also feel user friendliness slowly slowly for the same versions which are used by you.
PS 7 is one of the older versions of Photoshop, before Adobe's merger with Macromedia. Photoshop CS4 is the current version of Photoshop (soon to be replaced with CS5 this summer). While the two have the same developer and history, CS4 is a much more advanced version of the program. Tasks that required separate programs or plugins (mini-programs that you can buy that run within PS) with PS 7 are now standard in CS4.
They aren't quite the same program; Elements is aimed at home and educational users, CS2 is aimed at professional image manipulators. Because of that CS2 does things that home users don't need; CMYK colour models, support for teams working on the same image, support for high depth (32 bit) images.
Photoshop Elements provides nearly the same functionality of the full version. It is neither easier nor more difficult to use.
NO! I think photosmart is a type of HP printer and phototshop is software designed by adobe for editing images.
Flash is an adobe program just like Photoshop and Illustrator. It is the same on both mac's and pc's.
A good start is to purchase "Adobe Photoshop CS5 Classroom in a Book" and work through it in Photoshop with the images on its enclosed DVD. If you don't have the CS5 version of Photoshop, purchase the book of the same name except replace the version number in the book name with the Photoshop version you have. Another good learning resource is watching the tutorial videos of the latest versions of Photoshop on the Adobe TV website. Some great learning resources online that have a low-priced fee attached are in the related links. Also check out instructor-led training options in your state in the Adobe Partner Finder on the Adobe website at the related link. TIP: Check out the new "Creative Cloud" on the Adobe website for info on the new subscription-based access to a huge package of many different Adobe softwares - $(49.99/mo or 29.99/mo education pricing).
No - it's the same price for Macs as well as PC's. However, the free trial download of Photoshop direct from Adobe is no cost for either (see related links below)
Just like the mask in the real life.The mask option also works the same way.The mask option in the Adobe Photoshop allows you hide the part of the picture or graphics created using Photoshop.You club the mask option with other options available to create new effects.Mask option works the same way in each and every other soft-ware of Adobe.
ive been wondering the same question... i hate how adobe moves everything around