Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 11 to 20 of 20

Thread: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?

  1. #11

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    I use both CS4 and CS3 (different locations) . Honestly both programs are amazing but here are some comments. CS4 has many major improvements, but also some things worth noting.


    The biggest thing to be aware of is what processor you are using. CS4 is really designed for Core 2 Duo, or Quad core processors. CS4 on a Pentium 4 or Pentium D is going to be rough. I found CS4 unusable on a Pentium D with 2GB of RAM. I now use Intel Quad cores and both run smooth, although I have to say CS3 runs much snappier.
    I have not run either on AMD Athlon, Phenom, or Phenom II.


    CS4 issues I have are:


    1) When 3D acceleration is enabled, text typing and manipulation is slow.
    2) General movement of text is slower, layer alignment is slower.
    3) My OnOne plugins are now spread out. i.e. Focal Point is under Automate, Mask Pro is under Filters. I liked them collected as in CS3.
    4) Web galleries have been removed.
    5) Images are opened in the same tabbed window, this creates extra steps when working with multiple images. I like the old way better. Tabbed is great for browsing web pages, not for working with images.


    CS4 goodness:


    1) CS4 Bridge is awesome compared to CS3
    2) Having ACR 5 is almost worth the cost. The Adjustment brush(es) in ACR 5 run flawlessly.
    3) The whole look of CS4 is very refined and clean.
    4) Technical improvements like using 64bit, and RAM usage. (this is big)
    5) Huge 3D improvements.


    Differences aside and depending on how and what you work with, and if you have the computing power, I say go for CS4. It is a great upgrade that utilizes new and improved computing architecture. I have some issues, but indeed as I remember, when CS3 came out, I had a hard time leaving CS2.



  2. #12
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    10

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    The comp I plan to use it onhas aPentium Duo Core 2.6 gHz with 4gb of RAM. I also plan to update it to a quad core eventually. I think I should be ok right? Honestly most of those features you mentioned I have no idea what they were. I used photoshop CS3 in a class I took for half a year, so as of now I know the basic editing and layers stuff, but I'm a quick learner lol

  3. #13
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    2

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    Quote Originally Posted by unjx
    CS4 issues I have are:


    5) Images are opened in the same tabbed window, this creates extra steps when working with multiple images. I like the old way better. Tabbed is great for browsing web pages, not for working with images.



    I personally like this... I hate when things are all over and an opened photo covers a minimized photo. One trick I've learned is that if you're dragging something over to another picture, drag it up to the tab and wait until it switches to that picture and just drop it in. Voila. If you already knew that and still didn't like I think you can turn it off in the preferences, no?



  4. #14

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    you are right mk, I can simply turn that off in preferences. I did not know that at the time of my post. I open many files at a time and need drag layers between files, so for me opening in tabs was bad. Good thing there is a preference for this. I also see the sense in tabs for organization and layout for certain work flows.


    Cheers to Adobe for seeing differences.

  5. #15
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    23

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    There is a 4 part video on Scott Kelby's blog (Was going to be 2 parts!).


    It totals about 35 odd minutes and is mostly them talking about the new features - not so much waffle as in the PhotoshopTv show!!

  6. #16
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    105

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    You can jump back to CS1, and not miss much. The main new things in CS4 are:


    - openGL processing to make moving the canvas around easier/moer smoothly


    - focus stacking (VERY impressed)


    - content aware stretching (cool, but I've never used it beyond toying around and saying 'wow')


    - some level tools that let you target the image directly rather than use sliders. Nothing that you can't do otherwise.


    Of those, the focus stacking is an absolute godsend for me, but nothing that CS3 can't handle. If the price is better, stay a version behind.

  7. #17
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    2

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    I find it difficult to go back to previous versions once I get used to one. CS3/CS4 isn't such a big issue for me, but one of the computers at our studio has CS2 installed which sometimes I have to use if it's for a quick corporate headshot or whatnot and using it actually... infuriates me!

  8. #18
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    7

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    Quote Originally Posted by mkfoto


    I find it difficult to go back to previous versions once I get used to one. CS3/CS4 isn't such a big issue for me, but one of the computers at our studio has CS2 installed which sometimes I have to use if it's for a quick corporate headshot or whatnot and using it actually... infuriates me!
    <div style="clear: both;"]</div>


    same here, i hate using cs3. I still have it installed because that's the newest version that my scanner will jive with.

  9. #19
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    105

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    One of the main things that jumps at me, is the lack of histogram behind the curves graph. I tend to use curves as a cheap way to access levels too (just leave the line straight).

  10. #20
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    7

    Re: Photoshop: Cs3 or Cs4?



    you have to go into window and select histogram.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •