Okay so I'm trying to put Adobe Photoshop Elements 11 on my new computer. I can't find my disc or my serial number but I can find the box packaging. I went to my old computer to register it to my account but every time I tried it would say "Could not register your product at this time. Try again later." I figured if it was registered to my account, I could log on to my account on my new computer and download it from there. So basically I need to move the software from my old computer to my new computer with out the serial number, or installation disc.
Help, I was trying to install munold photoshop 7.0.1, but I cannkt find the activation code. I know these wouldnt normally be given out, but I was wondering since its such an old version if its possible to get one.
Given PS7's advanced age and lack of features, this might be a good opportunity to scrap it for better software. Even if you do find a serial number for your 2 decades old product, there's no guarantee it will run right on a modern machine and OS. And there's absolutely zero chance it will run much less install on a recent Mac.
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Adobe Photoshop is a raster graphics editor developed and published by Adobe Inc. for Windows and macOS. It was originally created in 1987 by Thomas and John Knoll. Since then, the software has become the most used tool for professional digital art, especially in raster graphics editing. The software's name is often colloquially used as a verb (e.g. "to photoshop an image", "photoshopping", and "photoshop contest")[6] although Adobe discourages such use.[7]
Photoshop's naming scheme was initially based on version numbers. However, in October 2002 (following the introduction of Creative Suite branding), each new version of Photoshop was designated with "CS" plus a number; e.g., the eighth major version of Photoshop was Photoshop CS and the ninth was Photoshop CS2. Photoshop CS3 through CS6 were also distributed in two different editions: Standard and Extended. With the introduction of the Creative Cloud branding in June 2013 (and in turn, the change of the "CS" suffix to "CC"), Photoshop's licensing scheme was changed to that of software as a service subscription model. Historically, Photoshop was bundled with additional software such as Adobe ImageReady, Adobe Fireworks, Adobe Bridge, Adobe Device Central and Adobe Camera RAW.
Photoshop and derivatives such as Photoshopped (or just Shopped) have become verbs that are sometimes used to refer to images edited by Photoshop,[34] or any image manipulation program. The same happens not only in English but as the Portuguese Wikipedia entry for image manipulation attests, even in that language, with the trademark being followed by the Portuguese verb termination -ar, yielding the word "photoshopar" (to photoshop). Such derivatives are discouraged by Adobe[7] because, in order to maintain validity and protect the trademark from becoming generic, trademarks must be used as proper nouns.[citation needed]
Photoshop's naming scheme was initially based on version numbers, from version 0.63 (codename "Bond"; double-oh-seven), through version 0.87 (codename "Seurat" which was the first commercial version, sold as "Barneyscan XP"), version 1.0 (February 1990) all the way to version 7.0.1. Adobe published 7 major and many minor versions before the October 2003 introduction of version 8.0 which brought with it the Creative Suite branding.
CS2 activation servers' shutdown: In January 2013, Adobe Photoshop CS2 (9.0), with some other CS2 products, was released with an official serial number, due to the technical glitch in Adobe's CS2 activation servers (see Creative Suite 1 and 2).
I'm currently trying to follow a Bob Ross painting video (yes, I am that bad, but he makes it so much easier) and he lists the colors he uses at the start of the video. I have all of the hex codes for that supposed "exact" color in terms of digital art, but I can't find where to enter it in photoshop. Could anybody give me a hand? Thanks!
If you want exact, hex color is subject to the same requirements for proper color management. A given hex number is undefined until you assign a color space to that number. Only then does it refer to a specific color.
I wrote in #2 that it is a "safe assumption" that hex numbers refer to sRGB. Actually that's not right. It's a much safer assumption that hex is used without any color management at all. So it doesn't refer to sRGB; it refers to monitor color.
Take hex # e40903. Without specifying a color space you might as well say 'reddish'. It is no more accurate than quoting RGB 228,09,03 which is the same number just in decimal notation and equally meaningless without the color space context.
It would be a bit like going into an art store and asking for tube number 233 without specifying which manufacturer and range of paint you want tube number 233 from. You will get a colour but not necessarily the same colour as I would get doing the same in my local store who sell a different range.
It is not the use of a Hex code that is bad, it is just three numbers after all, and a very quick way of expressing those three numbers. What is wrong is the expectation that a Hex code refers to a specific colour. It does not. Any numeric representation of a colour be it in base 2, base 10 , base 16 or base 123 will only refer to a specific colour when used in the context of a specific colour space.
So no problem with use of Hex codes as such, I programmed in hexadecimal using "machine code" instructions many years ago, it's just when they are misrepresented as being more accurate than any other number that I frown
Incidentally both are meaningless unless expressed in the context of a particular colour space. So the same numbers in decimal or hex, represent different colours in sRGB, Adobe RGB, Prophoto. I add this only because many people think that a Hex code is less ambiguous that a set of RGB decimal values. They are equally accurate or inaccurate depending on whether the color space is given.
To the other part of your question. 8 bit and 16 bit integers represent the same range of values but 16 bit divides that range into smaller increments. However 32 bit floating point numbers are very different. They represent an extended dynamic range and have the capability to express darker values than can be represented by 8 bit 0, and lighter values than can be represented by 8 bit 255 (or FF in hexadecimal). As such, hex codes have no place in 32 bit/channel.
There is nothing specifically wrong with using hexadecimal or decimal numbers for RGB values. The problem comes when the colour space is assumed and not specified. If you are lucky an assumption of sRGB for hex values is correct, if you are unlucky then the colour is wrong.
Where do you want this number to be if not in the file name. Does each PSD contain a single Image or a layer you want identified with a number, do you want a text layer added? What do you actually want to do.
"My attempts using variables isn't working - Photoshop will only add a number to the image open in Photoshop and not the other 43 images in the same folder. All images and text document are in the same folder."
"I have tried using a plain text document with only the number required to be added to each image. Also a text file with the filename of each image, tab or comma, and number required to be added to each photo - reversed order als, number, tab or comma followed by filename. I have tried opening all of the photos in Photoshop, instead of only having the first image containing a text layer with number 1. I can change the number on the first image open in Photoshop but nothing happens to the remaining 43 images. Is there a way to instruct Photoshop to process all 44 images - apply a sequential number into each image please?
IMO you should open each in Photoshop one at a time and add the number you want where you want and if a visible number in the image the size and location you want. Its only 44 files. If this will become a regular ongoing process you need to do. You could think about automating the process. However it will take a very long time to learn to Script Photoshop, weeks, months perhaps years.
I am trying to place a number on each image (text layer), in the corner. I start by opening a psd file and add a text layer with the number 1. I record this as an action in case its needed for variables.
You do not seem to get data driven graphics. You create a Template PSD file. In that psd document you create layers. So you would create an Image layer and a text layer. The document canvas size would le the size you want you psd images to be perhaps a white background layer. Your image layer would be above the background layer and position over the background layer the size and position you want. Your text layer would be the font you want ant the size you want and the position where you the number to be. You would define your image layer a variable name like Image and the text a variable name like number and save a psd like MyTemplate.psd. You would create a CSV file with two columns Image and Number. and rows for each file you want to create. In your case 44 rows . the first entry the full path and file name of an image file like "C:\My Images\Imagefilename.jpg" followed by a , then text the sequence number the image should have. Photoshop Data driven graphics will use your template and your CVS files and create your 44 psd files.
If you follow the tutorial that you posted, all you need to do is create a file that is the same size as your images. You can start with the first image, add a number layer and then save this into a subfolder called "Template Image". Variables will use this image as a template to create your new images which will be copies of the original images but with numbers added to them.
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