News
Adobe Ships Creative Suite 4, Flash Player 10
- By David Nagel
- October 15, 2008
Adobe
has begun shipping Creative Suite 4, featuring new versions of its
development, design, publishing, and video/motion graphics
applications. The company also
released Flash Player 10 Wednesday.
Creative Suite 4
Creative Suite 4 is available in six distinct editions--Design
Standard, Design Premium, Web Standard, Web Premium, Production
Premium and the Mast Collection, which contains all of the individual
applications. Almost all of the applications in the collections have
received some major upgrades, with a particular focus on performance
and UI enhancements in the applications that formerly belonged to
Macromedia (Dreamweaver, Flash, etc.).
What follows is a list of
some of the more significant enhancements to the individual
applications in Creative Suite 4.
Photoshop:
- 3D compositing and editing features;
- 3D object/layer manipulation directly within the main interface
window;
- Support for painting on 3D objects;
- New painting modes used on 3D layers--diffuse, bump,
glossiness, shininess, opacity, reflectivity, and self-illumination;
- A new integrated ray tracer for higher final render quality;
- Non-destructive adjustments for raw images;
- A new version of Adobe Bridge featuring updated navigation,
workspace control, and UI, among other new features;
- New printing options, including 16-bit printing in Mac OS X;
- Support for multi-touch gestures in Mac OS X;
- Overall performance improvements;
- Support for using video layers as textures;
- Support for exporting 3D layers to the OBJ, KMZ, Collada, and
U3D file formats;
- General UI enhancements;
- Manipulation of light, camera, and material properties of
imported 3D objects; and
- The new ability to convert text and images to "volumes."
Dreamweaver:
- Significant performance improvements in split-code view;
- A new UI, with completely redesigned palette styles, along with
some rearrangements within the menus and palettes themselves;
- Live View, which allows users to preview their pages with
browser accuracy;
- Live Code, which lets users modify code while in Live VIew
mode;
- Related Files, which displays all of the related files for a
given document that you're working on, including CSS, XML, and other
types of external documents;
- The ability to create data sets directly within an HTML
document using tables, divs, or ULs;
- Support for Photoshop's Smart Objects feature;
- InContext Editing;
- Code hinting for Ajax and JavaScript frameworks; and
- Support for Adobe AIR authoring.
Flash:
- Support for inverse kinematics for simplified animations of
multiple related objects;
- An object-based animation model designed to reduce the number
of steps it takes to create a basic animation;
- A new Motion Editor, which provides independent control over
every motion parameter;
- 3D transformation capabilities;
- A new tool called Deco, which is a procedural modeling tool for
creating pattern effects from individual symbols;
- Built-in Adobe AIR publishing support;
- XFL file format support;
- Support for XMP metadata;
- New support in Adobe Media Encoder for H.264 encoding; and
- Adoption of the suite-wide CS4 interface and a few new UI
options to make Flash a bit more intuitive for non-coders.
Fireworks:
- Performance and stability improvements;
- Adoption of Adobe's text engine;
- An overhauled user interface and general workspace
improvements;
- Adobe AIR interactive prototyping;
- The ability to design and export CSS-based Web page layouts;
and
- The ability to export to PDF.
Illustrator:
- Support for multiple artboards (a long-requested feature);
- Enhancements to gradients, including support for transparency,
new elliptical gradients, and overall improvements to manipulating
gradients on objects;
- A new Blob Brush tool, which creates outlined and filled shapes
from brush strokes (as opposed to stroked paths);
- The addition of Flex Skin Design extensions;
- Enhanced integration with other Adobe apps, including multiple
artboard support in Flash and InDesign CS4;
- Smart Guides;
- Appearance editing within the Appearance palette;
- Graphic Styles previews (without applying the styles to
objects);
- Support for more object types in Isolation mode; and
- A separations preview.
InDesign:
- Automatic text reflow for overset copy, including the creation
of new pages to handle the flow;
- Page/spread rotation for simplifying the task of working with
non-horizontally aligned text;
- Smart guides to assist with transforming multiple objects
(without the need to create guides manually);
- Conditional Text, which allows users to create multiple, unique
versions of a document;
- An enhanced Links palette;
- A new feature called cross-referencing, which automatically
updates multiple elements when a change is made to one of them; and
- Live Preflight, which provides warnings during the entire page
layout/design process.
After Effects:
- Support for importing Photoshop 3D layers;
- New 2.5D planar motion tracking via Imagineer Systems' Mocha
for After Effects;
- Additional 3D compositing features, including keyframing
individual X, Y, and Z transformations;
- Searchable timelines;
- Additional features for exporting to Flash CS4;
- Interface and workflow improvements; and
- Integrated mobile device authoring workflow.
Premiere Pro:
- New direct-to-disk recording support;
- Batch encoding;
- Improved integration with other Adobe applications, including
Dynamic Link to Encore, improved support for Photoshop features, and
improved copy and paste text between Adobe applications;
- A wide range of new editing enhancements;
- Improved project, sequence, and clip management; and
- A new Source Monitor for more precise viewing of audio
waveforms.
Flash Player 10
Adobe also released Flash Player 10 today. The new version includes
performance improvements and additional creative features, including
support for new effects, 3D transformation and animation, improved
audio processing, and GPU hardware acceleration.
Flash Player 10 is available now for Mac OS X, Windows and Linux.
It can be downloaded here.
About the Author
Dave Nagel is the executive editor for 1105 Media's educational technology online publications and electronic newsletters. He can be reached at [email protected].