The issue is with the mouse behaviour in Mac OS10.7, not with Illustrator itself. I have solved the problem by turning off the mouse scrolling while in an Illustrator session. To do this:
> Mac system preferences
> universal access [it's here, not under "mouse"!]
> mouse, then select "mouse options"
> deselect "scrolling"
The latest version, Illustrator CS5, is the fifteenth generation in the product line.
do a poo
See related link for detailed explanation.
Open it up, Crl-A or Cmd-A, Ctl-C Or Cmd-C, open up a new file, and Ctl-V or Cmd-v Done
To separate two anchor points of a path in Illustrator CS5, select the Direct Selection Tool (A) from the toolbar. Click on the anchor point you want to move, and then drag it away from the other anchor point. If you want to separate the points while maintaining the path's shape, you can hold down the Alt key (Option key on Mac) while dragging the anchor point. This allows you to adjust the handles independently if the points are part of a curve.
CS5
yes.
NO! Adobe CS5 is not at all free. It comes in the following variants - 1) CS5 Design Premium 2) CS5 Web Premium 3) CS5 Production Premium 4) CS5 Master Collection Decide which product suites your needs and go ahead. Detailed information is available at the related link.
cs5 is better
Watch at Options Bar which is below menus in Photoshop and you will see anti - aliasing for many tools available like Type Tool for example, turn it on.
No Photoshop CS5 and Photoshop Elements are separate programs.
Yes, Photoshop is backwards compatible, however, once you save the file in CS5 you will not be able to use it in CS4 anymore. You can use files saved in CS5 in almost any other version and any page layout program which supports psd files, here i mean to save as psd. When saving turn on Maximize PSD and PSB File Compatibility in Edit > Preferences > File Handling.