ABGINEH  PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIES  INSTITUTE

ABGINEH PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIES INSTITUTE

موسسه تحقیقات و مطالعات عکاسی آبگینه
ABGINEH  PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIES  INSTITUTE

ABGINEH PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIES INSTITUTE

موسسه تحقیقات و مطالعات عکاسی آبگینه

فتوشاپ سی سی Adobe Photoshop CC 2015

 

Adobe Photoshop CC 2015


نرم افزار فتو شاپ یک پردازشگر و نرم افزار  گرافیکی ویرایش عکس است که توسط شرکت ادوبی طراحی شده و نرم افزار محبوبی برای عکاسان جهت پردازش ، ترکیب، ویرایش، بازسازی و یا دگرگونی تصاویر دیجیتالی می باشد. نرم افزار فتوشاپ به خاطر تنوع ابزارهایی که در اختیار طراحان و عکاسان می‌گذارد، از محبوبیت و کاربرد بسیاری برخوردار است. 

   شرکت ادوبی نسخه جدیدی از نرم افزار فتوشاپ را در مجموعه ( Adobe Creative Cloud ) CC   ارائه نموده است. فتوشاپ سی سی 2015، تفاوت های بسیار مهمی با نسخه های گذشته فتوشاپ دارد. علاوه بر این ،توانایی فراهم سازی امکانات جدید و رفع مشکلات قبلی این نرم افزار، باعث شده تا نسخه موجود بسیار کاربردی و بهتر از نسخه های گذشته باشد.

  در Adobe Photoshop CC 2015  که نسخه شانزدهم، از این مجموعه است ،امکانات جدیدی مانند ، وجود ابزارهای کامل تری برای ویرایش تصاویر، بهره گیری از ابزارهای انتخاب بهتر ، توانایی بزرگنمایی عکس ها، با کمترین افت کیفیت، توانایی کاهش محو شدن حاصل از لرزش دوربین و بسیاری ویژگی های جدید را در خود جای داده است.

  بهبود در ایجاد افکت های سه بعدی، اضافه شدن میانبرهای جدید ، رابط کاربری انعطاف پذیر و جذاب تر، بهتر شدن فرایند کار بر ویدئوها و فایل های سه بعدی ، بهبود بهره وری در فرایند استفاده از محیط کار ، ایجاد ابزارهای امکان تبدیل ‏عکس از دو بعدی به سه بعدی با یک فرایند ساده، افزایش گزینه هایی برای چاپ عکس، ایجاد‎ ‎پانل‎ ‎Mask جدید جهت بهینه شدن کار با ماسک ها ، ‏‎ ‎بهینه سازی فرایند ساخت تصاویر پانوراما و تغییرات کلی در ابزار تصحیح رنگ از امتیازات این نسخه از فتوشاپ است.

از قابلیت های دیگر نرم افزار  Adobe Photoshop CC 2015 می توان به موارد زیر اشاره کرد :

  توانایی شارپ هوشمند Smart Sharpen ،‏ این ابزار دارای تکنولوژی حرفه ای برای افزایش وضوح عکس ها استو موجب افزایش شفافیت و کاهش نویز و محو ی می شود. علاوه بر این ، جهت کاهش محوی تصویر که در اثر لرزش دوربین بوجود آمده و یا عکس هایی که در سرعت پایین شاتر دوربین گرفته شده اند  نیزبسیار موثر است.

 ارائه پلاگین  Adobe CameraRawبرای ویرایش فایل های خام و غیر خام ، بصورت یک فیلترو با امکان پشتیبانی از لایه ها و همچنین  پشتیبانی کامل تر از Smart Object ها. انتخاب افکت ها وقابلیت باز گرداندن به ‏حالت قبل ،از امکانات توسعه یافته این نسخه از فتوشاپ است. در این حالت، شما می ‏توانید به عکس ها و یا ویدئوهای خود افکت های مختلفی اضافه کنید و هر زمان که خواستید به حالت اولیه باز ‏گردانید. تغییر یا حذف افکت هایی که ساخته اید بدین ترتیب ساده خواهند بود.

موسسه تحقیقات و مطالعات عکاسی آبگینه - ابراهیم بهرامی

از آدرس زیر می توانید این نرم افزار را دانلود کنید ،  حجم فایل 946 مگا بایت ،شیوه  نصب نرم افزار در فولدر مربوطه آمده است.

https://www.mediafire.com/?8mf9dxzzd0mzuu3

انسل آدامز

 باید روح عکاسان پیشین را از طریق بهترین نمونه های کارشان دریابیم و ارج بگذاریم ، تا به این وسیله کار خودمان را استحکام و انسجام ببخشیم.انسل آدامز

Warning of data ticking time bomb

The growing problem of accessing old digital file formats is a "ticking time bomb", the chief executive of the UK National Archives has warned.

Natalie Ceeney said society faced the possibility of "losing years of critical knowledge" because modern PCs could not always open old file formats.

She was speaking at the launch of a partnership with Microsoft to ensure the Archives could read old formats.

Microsoft's UK head, Gordon Frazer, warned of a looming "digital dark age".

Natalie Ceeney, National Archives chief executive

 

Costly deal

He added: "Unless more work is done to ensure legacy file formats can be read and edited in the future, we face a digital dark hole."

Research by the British Library suggests Europe loses 3bn euros each year in business value because of issues around digital preservation.

The National Archives, which holds 900 years of written material, has more than 580 terabytes of data - the equivalent of 580,000 encyclopaedias - in older file formats that are no longer commercially available.

Ms Ceeney said: "If you put paper on shelves, it's pretty certain it is going to be there in a hundred years.

"If you stored something on a floppy disc just three or four years ago, you'd have a hard time finding a modern computer capable of opening it.

"Digital information is in fact inherently far more ephemeral than paper," warned Ms Ceeney.

She added: "The pace of software and hardware developments means we are living in the world of a ticking time bomb when it comes to digital preservation

We cannot afford to let digital assets being created today disappear. We need to make information created in the digital age to be as resilient as paper."

But Ms Ceeney said some digital documents held by the National Archives had already been lost forever because the programs which could read them no longer existed.

"We are starting to find an awful lot of cases of what has been lost. What we have got to make sure is that it doesn't get any worse."

The root cause of the problem is the range of proprietorial file formats that proliferated during the early digital revolution.

Technology companies, such as Microsoft, used file formats which were not only incompatible with pieces of software from rival firms, but also between different iterations of the same program

Costly deal

Microsoft has developed a new document file format, called Open XML, which is used to save files from programs such Word, Excel and Powerpoint.

Mr Frazer said: "It's an open international standard under independent control. These are no longer under control of Microsoft and are free for access by all."

But some critics question Microsoft's approach and ask why the firm has created its own new standard, rather than adopting a rival system, called the Open Document Format.

Instead, Microsoft has released a tool which can translate between the two formats.

Ben Laurie, director of the Open Rights Group, said: "This is a well-known, standard Microsoft move.

"Microsoft likes lock-ins. Typically, what happens is that you end up with two or three standards."

The agreement between the National Archives and Microsoft centres on the use of virtualisation.

The archive will be able to read older file formats in the format they were originally saved by running emulated versions of the older Windows operating systems on modern PCs.

Floppy discs
Data on floppy discs may be in unreadable formats

For example, if a Word document was saved using Office 97 under Windows 95, then the National Archives will be able to open that document by emulating the older operating system and software on a modern machine.

Ms Ceeney said the issue of older file formats was a bigger problem than reading outdated forms of media, such as floppy discs of various sizes and punch cards.

"The media it is stored in is not relevant. Back-up is important, but back-up is not preservation."

Adam Farquhar, head of e-architecture at the British Library, praised Microsoft for its adoption of more open standards.

He said: "Microsoft has taken tremendous strides forward in addressing this problem. There has been a sea change in attitude."

He warned that the issue of digital preservation did not just affect National Archives and libraries.

"It's everybody - from small businesses to university research groups and authors and scientists.

"It's a huge challenge for anyone who keeps digital information for more than 15 years because you are talking about five different technology generations."

The British Library and National Archives are members of the Planets project which brings together European National Libraries and Archives and technology companies to address the issue of digital preservation.

He said that open file formats were an important step but there was still work to be done.

"Automation is a key area to work on. We need to be able to convert hundreds and even thousands of documents at a time," he said.

.

Mr Frazer said Microsoft had shifted its position on file formats.

"Historically within the IT industry, the prevailing trend was for proprietary file formats. We have worked very hard to embrace open standards, specifically in the area of file formats."

bbC.