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Adobe launches a new Lightroom CC Cloud, renames old one “Classic”

Adobe: an all-new Lightroom CC service

Adobe Lightroom now has two CC versions, one of them for a new generation of photographers. Adobe hopes, with the new app, to transform digital photography again, as Lightroom did ten years ago.

There is a new Lightroom waiting for you. Adobe just announced the all-new Adobe Photoshop Lightroom CC cloud-based photography service. Through the new service Adobe is adapting the app, launched a decade ago, to an increasingly mobile-centric world, and with major improvements in smartphone cameras. Adobe believes that with this change Lightroom is transforming digital photography again. Built for professionals and enthusiasts, the new Lightroom CC fulfills the demands of today’s photographers for a more accessible, cloud-based photography service for editing, organizing, storing and sharing their photos from wherever they are.

https://youtu.be/HKyVVPu5DBI

Featuring a streamlined user interface, Lightroom CC enables powerful editing in full resolution across mobile, desktop and the web. With Lightroom CC, photographers can make edits on one device and automatically synchronize their changes everywhere. Lightroom CC makes organizing photography collections easier with features like searchable keywords that are automatically applied without the hassle of tagging. And Lightroom CC makes it simple to share photos on social media.

“As the leader in digital photography, today Adobe is unveiling Lightroom CC, our next generation photography service,” said Bryan Lamkin, executive vice president and general manager, Digital Media at Adobe. “Lightroom CC answers photographers’ demand for a deeply integrated, intelligent, cloud-based photography solution.”

Key Lightroom CC capabilities include:

Updated award-winning mobile and web experiences:

https://youtu.be/eMSNcM7C0UE

At the same time Adobe announced that updates to Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic CC are available. This new designation is for the “old” program, previously known as Adobe Lightroom 7, which Adobe integrated in the Cloud previously, while still keeping a version not associated with its subscription service. The updates include things as enhanced Embedded Preview workflow that enables users to scroll through large sets of photos to select a subset of images significantly faster than before. Lightroom Classic CC also features new editing capabilities, including a new Color Range and Luminance Masking functionality that enables users to apply precise edits. As contrasted with the cloud-centric, anywhere workflows of Lightroom CC, the new Lightroom Classic CC continues to focus on a more traditional desktop-first workflow with local storage and file and folder control. No word from Adobe, during the Adobe MAX, if the Lightroom 7 version not associated with any subscription will continue to be available.

The all-new Lightroom CC is available across three photography plans:

To sum it all up in a final note, the new Lightroom CC looks like Adobe’s solution to the speed problems Lightroom seems to have. I know it is a simplistic way to put things, but it surely looks like a “momentary” solution for a long-lasting problem. It will be interesting to see how users, even those that have a CC plan, will react to the changes. Also, no word from Adobe relating a new version of Lightroom without subscription of a CC plan. Is this the end of the perpetual license? If it is so, maybe Adobe should be remembered of a post in its own blog, where replying to the question ” Will Lightroom become a subscription only offering after Lightroom 5?” the company replied this: “Future versions of Lightroom will be made available via traditional perpetual licenses indefinitely.”

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