![]() This service is available to anyone with a free Adobe account. ![]() They can even extract CSS, images and other assets from you PSD without needing a their own Photoshop install. You now have an easy way to share version-managed PSDs with your team. Provide colleagues with access to extract assets ![]() Distribute PSDs to external contractorsĮxternal contractors can work directly with the latest versions of assets, exporting assets directly using the browser. That’s correct - they no longer need Photoshop to review PSDs. Creative Cloud lets them view and comment on your PSD comps live in the browser. However, I suspect most will see the power and flexibility of the new functionality.įorget about sending JPEG comps for client review. Note that if you are comfortable with your current workflow, the classic ‘Save for web’ option is still available. It’s not hard to see what a huge timesaver this could become. You can even set it to automatically re-generate the entire set of files any time you update the original document. Photoshop also makes it easy for you to automatically prefix each filename and export to sensible folder names. You can also choose to simultaneously generate images in up to eight different resolutions - ranging from 25% up to 400%. Layers can be exported in any one of six image formats: Let’s take a look at the new Extract Assets panel. ![]() Or by selecting ‘Extract Assets’ from the File Menu.By right-clicking on any layer/s and selecting ‘Extract Assets’.You can launch this new panel from two places: In theory, that could be a single layer, all layers, or any combination in between. The Extract Assets panel will target whatever layers you have selected in the Layers panel. Photoshop CC 2014 takes a fresh, much-improved approach to image export – a new ‘Extract Assets’ function. Launching the Extract Assets panel from inside the Layers panel. There are already a number of established methods for delivering adaptive image content to devices. By tailoring our images to the limitations of the each device, we can deliver pages faster while saving bandwidth costs – a win for everyone. Tammy’s numbers tell us that sending slow, family-sized images to baby-sized devices isn’t just bad manners - it’s actually costing us customers and money. A 2-second delay during a transaction = 87% shopping cart abandonment rate.44% of shoppers interpret slow performance as ‘something went wrong’.Slow web pages correlate to more than $3b lost sales annually.Last month Tammy Everts published some very sobering figures on the effects of site performance on user behaviour. So, why are we still loading the same ‘family-sized’ images onto all these wildly different devices? But does it really matter? The truth is, in 2014 there are as many motorbikes on ‘our super-highway’ as there are sedans and trucks. Today, mobile users often make up more than half of our traffic. Our current reality is a very different picture. Photo: Andy Schofield – cc The right assets for the right devicesįive years ago the web was a more predictable place, wasn’t it?Īs web developers, we could reasonably expect web browsers no narrower than 640 pixels, and no wider than 1240 - it was as if our ‘internet super-highway’ was trafficked only with family sedans.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |