Yes. There are numerous people around the world who can use Adobe Photoshop really, really well. :-)
Adobe Photoshop tutorials online has thousands of free tutorials to teach you how to use their photoshop. You can also use photoshop or adobe to find all the answers to your questions as well.
You can browse through fee Adobe Photoshop tutorials at http://www.adobephotoshoptutorials.com/. This is a pretty comprehensive site that covers the basics of Adobe Photoshop as well as more advanced techniques.
To open a PSD file is an Adobe Photoshop file. To open such a file one needs to have Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Elements installed on their computer as well as the latest Adobe flash player.
Adobe Photoshop Elements 7 features a full featured help interface, as well as a continually updated user manual available on Adobe's website.
Well the official website is adobe For Adobe Photoshop cs6 Extended you'll have to pay 999.0$, but you can find some cracked versions for free if you search on google.
That question is kind of hard to understand, but I'm assuming you mean which version of Photoshop is the best. That depends on what you want to do with Photoshop. Basically the newest version Adobe Photoshop cs5 is the best one because it's the newest and it's got the most options
An individual could find out more information about Photoshop through the Adobe website, as well as PC Support. Photoshop helps adjust, edit, and update images.
Go to the Adobe site. They sell all of their design products (photoshop, dreamweaver, etc) for mac os as well.
One can purchase the program Adobe Photoshop CS4 from Amazon. Photoshop allows one to alter and edit images as well as add in additional effects. One can also use raw image processing and create effects such as overlaying and over shadowing.
Adobe Software- illustrator, indesign and photoshop. As well as knowledge of typography and visual illustration
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.
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)