Adobe programs are designed to work together so you can focus on what you need to do, rather than on how to do it. In fact, the Adobe programs share tools and features for your most common tasks so you can work uninterrupted and move seamlessly from one program to another. Adobe Creative Suite is an integrated collection of programs that work together to help you create designs in print, on the Web, or on mobile devices. When you install Adobe Creative Suite or a stand-alone Adobe program, you also get additional Adobe programs—Bridge, Version Cue, Drive, ConnectNow, Device Central, and Extension Manager—to help you perform specific jobs, such as locating, downloading, and modifying images for projects, managing files and program extensions and testing files for different mobile devices.
Adobe Bridge is a program that lets you view, open, modify, and manage images located on your computer from any Adobe Creative Suite program. Adobe Bridge is literally the glue that binds Adobe Creative Suite programs together into one cohesive unit with shared tools. Bridge allows you to search, sort, filter, manage, and process image files one at a time or in batches. You can also use Bridge to do the following: create new folders; rename, move, delete and group files; edit metadata; rotate images; create web galleries and contact sheets; and run batch commands. You can also import files from your digital camera and view file information and metadata.
Adobe Creative Suite 4 is an integrated collection of programs that work together to help you create designs in print, on the Web, or on mobile devices. Adobe’s Creative Suite 4 comes in different editions with different combinations of Adobe programs. The main programs for print design include InDesign and Acrobat Professional; for graphic design the programs include Photoshop, Illustrator, and Fireworks; for video and sound design the programs include Premiere, After Effects Professional, Encore, and Soundbooth; and for web design the programs include Flash Professional, Dreamweaver, Fireworks, and Contribute.
When you install Adobe Creative Suite 4 or a stand-alone Adobe program, you also get additional Adobe programs—Bridge, Version Cue, Drive, ConnectNow, Device Central, and Extension Manager—to help you perform specific jobs such as managing files and program extensions and testing files for mobile devices.
Adobe Bridge CS4 is a file management/ batching program that manages and processes images while you work in your other Adobe programs. To use Bridge, click Browse in Bridge on the File menu within an Adobe product, such as Flash, or from the desktop use the Start menu (Win) or go to the Applications folder (Mac).
Adobe Version Cue is a file tracking management program you can use to keep track of changes to a file as you work on it or if you work collaboratively on the same files with colleagues. You use Adobe Bridge as a central location from which to use Version Cue. You can track Adobe and non-Adobe program files.
Adobe Drive (New!) allows you to connect to and use Version Cue servers as if they were a local hard drive or mapped network drive. After you set up a connection, you can work with Version Cue files by using the Open, Import, Export, Place, Save, or Save As dialog boxes, and Explorer (Win) or Finder (Mac).
The Share My Screen command (New!) on the File menu allows you to connect to Adobe ConnectNow, which is a secure Web site where you can start an online meeting. You can share and annotate your computer screen or take control of an attendee’s computer. During the meeting, you can communicate by sending chat messages, using live audio, or broadcasting live video.
Adobe Device Central CS4 allows you to test your content to see how it would look on a variety of mobile devices. You can interact with the emulated device in a way that allows you to test your content in real-world situations. Device Central provides a library of devices and each device includes a profile with information about the device, including media and content support types.
Adobe Bridge CS4 is a stand-alone program that lets you view, open, and manage images located on your computer from any Adobe Creative Suite 4 program. Adobe Bridge is literally the glue that binds Adobe Creative Suite 4 programs and shared tools together into one cohesive unit. Adobe Bridge integrates with shared tools including Adobe Version Cue, a file tracking project management program. The Bridge program provides a set of panels that make it easy to find, view, and manage the files on your computer or network. As you work with Bridge, you’ll open, close, and move (dock and undock) the panels to meet your individual needs. After you customize the workspace, you can save the location of the panels as a custom workspace, which you can display using the Workspace command on the Window menu. Bridge also provides some predefined workspaces.
Launch your Adobe product, click the File menu, and then click Browse in Bridge.
You can also start Adobe Bridge CS4 from the Start menu (Win) or the Applications folder (Mac).
To open and close a panel, click the Window menu, and then click the panel name you want.
To move a panel, drag the panel tab you want to another location in the Bridge window.
To save a workspace, click the Window menu, point to Workspace, click New Workspace, type a name, and then click OK.
To display a workspace, click the Window menu, point to Workspace, and then click the workspace you want.
When you’re done, click the Close button in the Bridge window.
If you have raw or other images from your digital camera, you can use the Get Photos from Camera command in Adobe Bridge to retrieve and copy them to your computer. This allows you to specify where you want to store the files, rename them if you want, preserve metadata, or convert them to the DNG format. When you convert raw files to the DNG format, you specify preview size, compression, and whether to preserve the raw image data or embed the original raw file.
In Adobe Bridge, click the File menu, and then click Get Photos from Camera or click the camera icon on the Application bar. (New!)
Click the Get Photos From popup, and then select the source camera or memory card.
Create a new subfolder to store the images (optional).
To rename the files, select a method, and then enter file name text.
Select the options you want:
Preserve Current Filename in XMP. Select to save the current filename as image metadata.
Open Adobe Bridge. Select to open and display the files in Adobe Bridge.
Convert To DNG. Select to convert Camera Raw files to DNG. Click Settings to set DNG conversion options.
Delete Original Files. (New!) Select to delete original files from camera or memory card.
Save Copies To. Select to save copies to another folder for backup.
To apply metadata to the files, click Advanced Dialog.
Click Get Photos.
Raw image file formats are created by most mid- to high-end digital cameras and contain information about how the image was taken. The raw format turns off all camera adjustments, and simply saves the image information. Using the raw format is as close to using traditional film as a digital camera can get. Raw images are larger; however, the increase in file size gives you more information that can be used by Camera Raw to adjust the image. From Adobe Bridge, you can use Camera Raw to open raw files, JPEG, and TIFF files to make image enhancements. If you’re not sure what to do, you can click Auto to have Camera Raw do it or drag color sliders to adjust options manually. Raw images can be converted into 16-bit images. When you use a 16-bit image, you have more control over adjustments such as tonal and color corrections. Once processed, raw images can be saved in the DNG, TIFF, PSD, PSB, or JPEG formats. After you make Camera Raw adjustments, you can save the settings so you can use them later.
In Adobe Bridge, click the Edit (Win) or Adobe Bridge (Mac) menu, and then click Camera Raw Preferences.
Select the preferences you want:
General. Specify where Camera Raw file settings are stored. Use Sidecar XMP files to store settings separately, or Camera Raw Database to store settings in a searchable database.
Default Image Settings. Select options to automatically apply settings or set defaults.
Camera Raw Cache. Set a cache size to shorten loading time for thumbnails and previews.
DNG File Handling. Select options to ignore XMP files or update embedded content.
JPEG and TIFF Handling. (New!) Automatically open JPEGs and/or TIFFs in Camera Raw.
Click OK.
Right-click the image, and then click Open in Camera Raw.
Use the Zoom, Hand, Rotate, Crop, and Straighten tools to change the size, orientation, and position of the image, or use the White Balance tool to set the white balance or the Color Sampler tool to sample a color, or use the Retouch and Red Eye Removal tools to correct the image. Use the Adjustment Brush and Graduated Filter for local adjustments.(New!)
Select from the available image view options:
Image Preview. Displays the active image.
Zoom Level. Changes the view of the active image.
Histogram. Displays information on the colors and brightness levels in the active image.
Click the Basic, Tone Curve, Detail, Lens, HSL/ Grayscale, Split Toning, Lens Corrections, or Camera Calibration tabs, and then click Auto (Basic tab) or drag sliders to modify the color and tonal values of the image.
Click Save Image to specify a folder destination, file name, and format for the processed images.
Select the images you want to synchronize (apply settings) in the Filmstrip (if desired, click Select All), and then click Synchronize.
Click the Camera Raw Menu button to Load, Save, or Delete a specific set of Raw settings, or to modify dialog box settings.
Click Done to process the file, but not open it, or click Open Image to process and open it in Photoshop. Hold Alt (Win) or Option (Mac) to use Open Copy or Reset.
With Adobe Bridge, you can drag assets into your layouts as needed, preview them, and add metadata to them. Bridge allows you to search, sort, filter, manage, and process image files one at a time or in batches. You can also use Bridge to create new folders; rename, move, delete and group files (known as stacking); edit metadata; rotate images; and run batch commands. You can also view information about files and data imported from your digital camera.
Launch your Adobe product, click the File menu, and then click Browse in Bridge, or click the Launch Bridge button (if available).
Click the Folder path, and then select a folder.
Click the Folders tab and choose a folder from the scrolling list.
Click the Favorites tab to choose from a listing of user-defined items, such as Pictures or Version Cue.
Click an image within the preview window to select it.
Click the Metadata tab to view image information, including date and time the image was shot, and aperture, shutter speed, and f-stop.
Click the IPTC Core arrow to add user-defined metadata, such as creator and copyright information, or captions.
Click the Preview tab to view a larger thumbnail of the selected image. Multiple images appear when you select them.
Click the image in the Preview tab to display a Loupe tool for zooming. Drag magnified box to change positions. Click it to deactivate the tool.
Drag the Zoom slider to increase or decrease the thumbnail views.
Click the preview buttons to select a different view of the workspace you have chosen. If you want to view your images in filmstrip or metadata focus mode, choose that workspace from the Window menu.
View Content as Thumbnails. Default view. Displays the images as thumbnails with the file name underneath.
View Content as Details. Displays a thumbnail of each image with selected details about the image such as date created, document type, resolution.
View Content as List. Displays a small thumbnail of each image with metadata information details, such as date created and file size.
Use the file management buttons to rotate or delete images, or create a new folder.
To narrow down the list of images using a filter, click the criteria you want to use in the Filter panel.
To add a label or rating to images, select the ones you want, click the Label menu, and then select the label or rating you want.
To group related images as a stacked group, select the images, click the Stacks menu, and then click Group as Stack.
Use the Stacks menu to ungroup, open, expand, or collapse stacks.
Double-click on a thumbnail to open it in the default program, or drag the thumbnail from the Bridge into an open Adobe application.
Adobe Bridge allows you to set preferences to customize the way you work. The Preferences dialog box is organized into categories—including General, Thumbnails, Playback, Metadata, Keywords, Labels, File Type Associations, Cache, Startup Scripts, Advanced, and Output. You can set specific options within these categories to suit your particular needs. For example, you can choose to display more metadata information with thumbnails, such as dimensions, size, keywords, color mode, label, etc.
In Adobe Bridge, click the Edit (Win) or Bridge (Mac) menu, and then click Preferences.
Click the General category.
Select the appearance, behavior, and Favorite Items you want.
Click the Thumbnails category.
Specify the performance and details options you want:
Performance and File Handling. Choose the maximum size of file to be processed (default: 1000 MB).
Details. Select the metadata details you want to show with the thumbnail.
Click the Metadata category.
Select the check boxes with the metadata you want and clear the ones you don’t want.
Click the Labels category.
Enter names for labels you want to be associated with a specific color.
Click the File Type Associations category.
The left column displays the file type and the right column displays the current program that will open the file by default.
To change the default program, click the list arrow next to the file type, and then select a program or choose Browse to locate another application you would like to use.
Click the Cache category.
Choose where to store the cache, choose a cache size, and optimize or purge the cache from here.
Click the Startup Scripts category.
Select the check boxes with the programs you want to enable and clear the ones you want to disable.
Click the Advanced category, and specify whether to use software rendering and monitor-size previews, and then choose the language and keyboard options you want. You can also choose to have Bridge start automatically at login.
Click OK.
Adobe Bridge makes it easy to make adjustments to one image in Camera Raw and then apply those adjustments to other images directly from Bridge without going back into Camera Raw. For instance, you may be correcting the white balance for an image and have many other images that were shot at the same time, under the same lighting conditions. You can use the initial settings to correct the rest of your images right from Bridge. You can also make a preset from your favorite adjustments, which will then be available as a develop setting within Bridge.
In Adobe Bridge, display and select the images that you want to adjust.
Use any of the following methods to modify an image:
Apply a Preset Adjustment. Click the Edit menu, point to Develop Settings, and then select a preset adjustment.
Copy and Paste Settings. Click the Edit menu, point to Develop Settings, and then click Copy Settings. Select the image(s) to which you want to apply the settings. Click the Edit menu, point to Develop Settings, and then click Paste Settings. Select the options to apply, and then click OK.
Apply the Most Recent Adjustment. Click the Edit menu, point to Develop Settings, and then click Previous Conversion.
Adobe Bridge takes the drudgery out of creating a Web Photo Gallery (New!) (thumbnail images on web pages). The pages generated with this command display small thumbnails of a group of images—when you click on an image, a larger version is displayed within another window or section of the page. If your goal is to show the world your photographs, but you don’t want to write all the HTML code involved in making that happen, then the Web Photo Gallery is just what you need.
In Adobe Bridge, select a folder with the images that you want to use for the photo gallery.
Click the Workspace menu, and then click Output.
Click the Web Gallery button.
Click the Template list arrow, and then select a template.
Click the Refresh Preview button to view your template choices or click the Preview in Browser button to see how it would look on the Web.
Use the following panels to customize the Web gallery:
Site Info. Provide descriptive information about the Web Photo gallery.
Color Palette. Select custom colors for screen elements.
Appearance. Specify options to show file names, a preview and thumbnail size, slide duration, and a transition effect.
In the Create Gallery panel, enter a gallery name, and then select a creation option:
Save to Disk. Click Browse to specify a location, and then click Save.
Upload. Specify the FTP server location, user name, password, a folder, and then click Upload.
The Tools menu provides commands you can use to automate tasks in Bridge. For example, you can automate the process of renaming a group of files using the Batch Rename command. If you use Photoshop, InDesign, or Version Cue, you can use commands on submenus to run automated tasks, such as adding and synchronizing files with Version Cue or processing raw images with Photoshop, or you can create a contact sheet of images in InDesign. You can also use the Tools menu to start other Adobe programs, such as Device Central and Acrobat Connect (Start Meeting) as well as create and edit Metadata templates, which you can use to append or replace metadata in Adobe InDesign or other XMP-enabled programs.
In Adobe Bridge, select the files or folders you want to use.
Click the Tools menu, and then click Batch Rename.
Select the Destination Folder option you want: Rename in same folder, Move to other folder, or Copy to other folder, and then click Browse to specify a new folder location.
Click the Element drop-down, and then select options to specify how you want to name the files:
Text, New Extension, Current Filename, Preserved Filename, Sequence Number, Sequence Letter, Date/Time, Metadata, or Folder Name.
Enter the text you want to use in conjunction with the Element selection to name the files.
Select the Preserve Current File Name In XMP Metadata check box to retain the original filename in the metadata.
Select the check boxes for the operating systems with which you want the renamed files to be compatible.
Click Rename.
The Share My Screen command (New!) on the File menu allows you to connect to Adobe ConnectNow, which is a secure Web site where you can start an online meeting and collaborate on any design project across platforms and programs. You can share and annotate your computer screen or take control of an attendee’s computer. During the meeting, you can communicate by sending chat messages, using live audio, or broadcasting live video. In addition, you can take meeting notes, and share files.
Click the File menu, and then click Share My Screen.
Enter your Adobe ID and password.
If you don’t have an Adobe ID and password, click the Create a Free Adobe ID link, and then follow the online instructions.
Click Sign In.
If prompted, sign in to ConnectNow.
To share your computer screen, click the Share My Computer Screen button.
Use the ConnectNow toolbar to do any of the following:
Meeting. Use to invite participants, share your computer screen, upload a file, share your webcam, set preferences, end a meeting, and exit Adobe ConnectNow.
PODS. Use to show and hide pod panels.
Help. Use to get help, troubleshoot problems, and set account and Flash Player settings.
Click the participant buttons at the bottom to specify roles, remove a user, or request control of a user’s computer.
With Adobe Drive CS4, you can access Adobe Version Cue CS4, a file versioning program you can use to keep track of changes to a file as you work on it and create projects to keep all your related files together. Version Cue allows you to access and manage Version Cue files and projects. You can use the Inspector panel and buttons in the Content panel to view, navigate, and access information, projects, and files on the Version Cue servers. You can check files in and out to make sure you’re the only one making changes and then synchronize the changes.
Before you can start using Version Cue, you need to install and configure the Version Cue Server, create a project to store master copies of files and related information, and assign users to it. The Version Cue Server gets automatically installed on your computer with Adobe Creative Suite 4 Design, Web, or Master Collection. Even though it’s installed, you still need to turn it on. Click My Server in the Adobe dialog box or in Adobe Bridge, and then follow the onscreen instructions to complete the initial server administration settings. If you’re sharing files and other assets in a workgroup, you should reinstall Version Cue on a dedicated network computer.
Version Cue file management provides access to projects and files. To use file management, you need to enable it. Version Cue is enabled by default in all Adobe Creative Suite programs (except Flash and Acrobat). To turn it on in an Adobe program, open the Preferences dialog box using the Edit (Win) or program name (Mac) menu, and select the Enable Version Cue check box in one of the categories. If you disable Version Cue file management in one Adobe Creative Suite program, you disable it in all others, except Acrobat, Flash, and Bridge.
Adobe Drive (New!) allows you to connect to and use Version Cue servers as if they were a local hard drive or mapped network drive. After you set up a connection, you can work with Version Cue files by using the Open, Import, Export, Place, Save, or Save As dialog boxes, and Explorer (Win) or Finder (Mac). After you start Adobe Drive, you can establish a connection to a Version Cue server, and then work with files on the server like a local or mapped drive. To change Adobe Drive preferences, click Preferences, specify caching and error logging settings, and then click Save.
Testing your content on as many different devices as possible allows you to reach a wider audience. Adobe Device Central makes it easy to test your content on a wide variety of different mobile devices in one place. Device Central provides a library of devices from which to choose, and each device includes a profile with information about the device, including media and content support types. Device Central uses an emulator to simulate the way your content will look on a selected device. An emulator is not the same as the real device. However, it allows you to quickly test devices to get initial results.
Start Adobe Device Central from the Start menu (Win) or the Applications folder (Mac) or from the File menu in Photoshop and choose Device Central.
In Bridge, right-click a file, and then click Test in Device Central.
From the Welcome screen or the File menu, select the option you want:
Open for Testing. Opens a file for testing with the Emulator tab. Use the buttons on the mobile device to test your content.
Device Profiles. Displays mobile device profiles. In the Available Devices panel, expand a folder with devices. On the Device Profiles tab, click links to display profile information.
Create New Mobile. Creates a new mobile document for Flash, Photoshop, or Illustrator; select a mobile device, and then click Create.
Select the Online Library panel where you can download specific mobile device specifications.
If you’re testing, select the options you want in the Testing panels.
When you’re done, click the Close button in the Device Central window.
The Adobe Extension Manager CS4 is a program you can use to install and delete added program functionality, known as extensions, to many Adobe programs. The Extension Manager is automatically installed when you install Flash, Dreamweaver, or Fireworks. You can use the Extension Manager to access the Adobe Exchange site, where you can locate, research, and download many different types of extensions. Some are free and some are not. After you download an extension, you can use Extension Manager to install it. Extension Manager only displays extensions installed using the Extension Manager; other extensions installed using a third-party installer might not appear. After you install an extension, you can find and display information about it.
Start Adobe Extension Manager CS4 from the Start menu (Win) or the Applications folder (Mac).
In Flash, Dreamweaver, or Fireworks, click the Help menu, and then click Manage Extensions.
Click the Exchange button on the toolbar.
Select the extension you want to download, and then save it to your computer.
In Extension Manager, click the Install button on the toolbar.
Locate and select the extension (.mxp) you want to install, and then click Install.
You can perform any of the following:
Sort. Click a column heading.
Enable or Disable. Select or clear the check in the Enabled check box next to the extension.
Remove. Select the extension, and then click Remove.
Click the Close button.