Yes, I started by deleting downloaded program files, temporary internet files, emptying the recycle bin and performing all such routine maintenance.
Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type.
In general each software consists of libraries and images as the GUI. The images itself has taken few percent of that. Then move to the core image process library which has many features such as gradient, filtering, rendering, etc. in photoshop's case. And finally in Flash they have to process the animation, script, and compiler. These all processes contains thousands even millions line of code that transform into many libraries.
It has a lot of features that’s why. If you want a smaller in size. Go for portable but it is not advisable because you cannot use the full feature of any adobe software.
Photoshop wasn’t broke and they “fixed” it anyway!
It went to H*** when they started charging a monthly fee for the program rather than letting customers own the program. In order to justify the monthly fee they feel they have to keep changing it and in my opinion most of the changes were (are) totally unnecessary. Additionally many of these changes cause major frustration for long time users who can’t find functions they’ve used for years because Adobe moved them to another tab or drop down.
Check into Gimp and Udemy School has a video course that will explain how to get GIMP to work almost exactly like Photoshop.
I would suggest you to try out Kdan’s PDF Reader - Document Expert. It’ a great alternative to Adobe Reader. Especially, it supports iOS, Android, Mac, and Windows 10, and you can work across your smart devices and PC/Mac with PDF Reader, just like what you do with Adobe Reader.
Adobe is a company that produces many software products. This question is exactly the same as asking “Does Ford get good gas mileage?”
If you let us know which product you’re thinking of we can make a better answer.
Lol! You must have a good hardware to use them. They just work fine:)
No, this is not exactly the way it works.
I think that you will find that it is still loaded onto your computer, but it needs regular interaction on the ‘net to keep your licence valid. So when you start to use your computer it automatically does a check to see that you are on the right computer and that it is the one with the licence. It also sees if there are any updates needed and will download them ready for installation.
Given the complexity of the Adobe suite it would not work as a cloud based system. It would eat up bandwidth each time you clicked you mouse! Well, sort of.
This is quite different from programmes which are “Cloud based” where you have (probably) to select templates and work with those. Canva comes to mind with this approach, for instance. You upload your raw data and it is worked on in their servers.
Office 365 has a similar system to Adobe. You pay per month but the suite is installed on your computer, what you can use is activated by your ongoing and live licence payments.
a natural building material
Adobe is made from a mixture of sand and clay with fibrous material like straw to hold it together and water to bind it. After drying in the sun it is surprisingly durable, and some of the world's oldest buildings are made from adobe. A ruined adobe "fort" near a Californian creek once called Yeguas Creek gave it the name Adobe Creek. One of the founders of Adobe Systems lived in Los Altos and named the company for Adobe Creek. This is how modern software gets named for ancient "hardware"!
Your question can’t be answered. Adobe is the name of a company, not the name of a program.
Adobe what? Adobe Reader? Adobe InDesign? Adobe Photoshop? Something else?
Unfortunately I don’t have that much money nor time to purchase software so I crack it instead. It comes down to two contenders: Premiere Pro and Photoshop.
I’m going to have to go with Photoshop because they have pretty easy tutorials to follow, and allows you to make thumbnails like this with the help of GFX packs and a fun little feature called “blending options”:
This is an example thumbnail made by me. I don’t have great photoshop skills at all.
Alexandra Farrugia [ https://www.quora.com/profile/Alexandra-Farrugia ] uses Premiere Pro daily so she would prefer that obviously. As time goes on, you learn to love the software or it could go to the other way like Jabba the Hutt said: “Soon you will learn to love me”.
Using Adobe Acrobat's Audit Space Usage function, you can see exactly what in your PDF is taking up all the space.
The reason the file might be smaller after you manually join the pages together is because files inside the PDF (such as images or font files) were not compressed properly initially.