AI features to Photoshop

 

Adobe brings generative AI features to Photoshop.



Adobe has tried to solve these problems with a core technology system called Firefly. The system in      purpose-built with  image data that is legal to use, and  Adobe says it can be used commercially. 

Adobe announced on Tuesday that it is adding artificial intelligence (AI) technology to its flagship image editing software, Photoshop, to create images.




The San Jose, Calif.-based company said it marked the beginning of a major push to add these AI technologies to its suite of programs aimed at creative professionals. Although the image hints at it, it has not yet been widely used by large enterprises due to legal issues regarding the data used to develop the system. 

Adobe has tried to solve these problems with a core technology system called Firefly. The system is purpose-built with  image data that is legal to use, and  Adobe says it can be used commercially.

Adobe said on a separate website that it has been testing the system for about six weeks  and on Tuesday  it will be adding features based on it to  the company's most famous product, Photoshop. One new feature is called "Generative Fill" and allows users to expand original images that were cropped  too close to computer content or add features based on textual descriptions.

For example, this feature can take a photo of a single flower and turn it into a flower field  with a mountain range behind it. It replaces the  graphic artist, but allows you to create new images faster from a variety of  ideas. In the past, you had to spend valuable time searching through photo archives and manually stitching together  existing image fragments. 

"It just speeds up the production run a lot," says Greenfield.

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