Disclaimer: The Photoshop (beta) app is available to all Creative Cloud members with a subscription or trial that includes Photoshop. Generative Fill is currently not available for commercial use, not available to people under 18, not available in China, and works with English-only text prompts.
To confirm that you are running the beta version, on a Windows PC, open the Help menu in the Menu Bar and choose About Photoshop. On a Mac, you'll see Photoshop (Beta) in the Menu Bar (where it normally just says Photoshop). But if you want further confirmation, you can click on it and choose About Photoshop.
Generative Fill is part of the new Adobe Photoshop hotness coming as a result of Adobe's Firefly and Sensei AI efforts. The company has released a beta version of Photoshop with the new feature which is available to anyone with a Creative Cloud subscription who downloads from the Beta channel.
Generative Fill in the Photoshop beta app is currently available to all Creative Cloud members with a Photoshop subscription or trial through the "Beta apps" section of the Creative Cloud app. It is not yet available for commercial use, not accessible to individuals under 18, not available in China, and currently supports English-only text prompts. Adobe plans to make Generative Fill available to all Photoshop customers in the second half of the 2023.
This is the oddest requirement. Apparently, you can't use the new Generative Fill feature until you've shared some personal identifying information with the Adobe Behance cloud service. I, personally, don't use Behance. Apparently, a lot of folks who downloaded the Photoshop beta also don't use it. Behance users, by contrast, will have already shared their confidential information with the service and be able to access the Photoshop Generative Fill AI feature.
Help developers test beta versions of their apps and App Clips using the TestFlight app. Download TestFlight on the App Store for iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, Watch, and iMessage. Apple Vision Pro will already have TestFlight installed.
Each build is available to test for up to 90 days, starting from the day the developer uploads their build. You can see how many days you have left for testing under the app name in TestFlight. TestFlight will notify you each time a new build is available and will include instructions on what you need to test. Alternatively, with TestFlight 3 or later, you can turn on automatic updates to have the latest beta builds install automatically.
When the testing period is over, you'll no longer be able to open the beta build. To install the App Store version of the app, download or purchase the app from the App Store. In-app purchases are free only during beta testing, and any in-app purchases made during testing will not carry over to App Store versions.
Note: To automatically download additional in-app content and assets in the background once a beta app is installed in iOS 16, iPadOS 16, or macOS 13, turn on Additional In-App Content in your App Store settings for iPhone, iPad, and Mac.
You can send feedback through the TestFlight app or directly from the beta app or beta App Clip by taking a screenshot, and you can report a crash after it occurs. If you were invited to test an app with a public link, you can choose not to provide your email address or other personal information to the developer. Apple will also receive all feedback you submit and will be able to tie it to your Apple ID.
If your device is running iOS 12.4 or earlier, tap Send Beta Feedback to compose an email to the developer. The feedback email contains detailed information about the beta app and about your iOS device. You can also provide additional information, such as necessary screenshots and steps required to reproduce any issues. Your email address will be visible to the developer when you send email feedback through the TestFlight app even if you were invited through a public link.
When you take a screenshot while testing a beta app or beta App Clip, you can send the screenshot with feedback directly to the developer without leaving the app or App Clip Experience. Developers can opt out of receiving this type of feedback, so this option is only available if the developer has it enabled.
When you test beta apps or beta App Clips with TestFlight, Apple will collect and send crash logs, your personal information such as name and email address, usage information, and any feedback you submit to the developer. Information that is emailed to the developer directly is not shared with Apple. The developer is permitted to use this information only to improve their App and is not permitted to share it with a third party. Apple may use this information to improve the TestFlight app and detect and prevent fraud.
When you send feedback through TestFlight or send crash reports or screenshots from the beta app, the following additional information is shared. This information is collected by Apple and shared with developers. Apple retains the data for one year.
Adobe Creative Cloud offers over 20 apps for your creative discovery. Not included in that number are a handful of beta apps that you may not be aware of. The beta apps include Photoshop Beta as part of its downloadable beta software.
While Adobe is, at the time of writing, running beta features using web-based Adobe Firefly, the beta app for Photoshop allows users to test new features that are close to being implemented directly in the Photoshop app.
When using any beta tool, you can leave feedback to Adobe about your results using thumbs up and thumbs down icons, and a flag icon to report any inappropriate results. You can also share your results directly with the Adobe community.
The Adobe Firefly AI beta initially focused on image generation and text effects and then expanded to offer vector recoloring and Generative Fill. Then Firefly integration arrived with the Photoshop beta getting Generative Fill in May.
It takes something special to make jaded photographers exclaim in genuine surprise when editing photos. The exclamations were rampant after Adobe recently released the latest public beta of Adobe Photoshop with a new Generative Fill feature that can create photorealistic objects, backgrounds, and scene extensions in existing photos using generative AI technology.
In the meantime, Creative Cloud subscribers can explore the capabilities of the beta and give Adobe feedback. Each variation thumbnail includes a three-dots menu where you can mark the result good or bad, delete the variation, or report it for potential violations of harmful or offensive content.
And if you don't have access to the Photoshop beta, you can play with these features in Adobe Firefly on the web. The service is now open to anyone and includes the Generative Fill feature that you can apply to images you upload.
My photohobby is like a sport to me and I don't like to cheat. I don't use photoshop anymore and don't even shoot raw. Too tempting to fix things in post.
If I can't take a decent jpeg I just need to train more.
Like our perception of reality, which many physicists feel is false, that what we see is a construct of our brain, photography, which has all been manipulated, think of the Fairy in the Garden photos. We are fully immersed in a world of what-is-real? Photograph has always been an art, editing, enhancing, changing, AI-ing, photoshopping, so it goes..doesn't make it any less joyous walking around with a camera and enjoying capturing pictures.
I don't feel "threatened" by this tech: people have been cheating on images for years using Photoshop, so much so that "to photoshop" is an accepted verb meaning "to manipulate a photograph". This new tech just makes it 100 times faster to remove someone from a photo, or place them in another part of the world.
@Alex probably not worth arguing with you about this cause you don't seem to quite grasp the issue: I asked it last night to show a building on fire and it said I violated terms of service. We are living in an age where art and speech are under attack and I am sure adobe's lawyers had to go through the laundry list of things that are offensive and doesn't pass the litmus test for a world that has become easily offended, and uncomfortable with reality. We are slowly moving towards the dark age so prepare to buckle up its only going to get worse. Good news I can stick to stable diffusion and do as I please.
On Tuesday, Adobe added a new tool to its Photoshop beta called "Generative Fill," which uses cloud-based image synthesis to fill selected areas of an image with new AI-generated content based on a text description. Powered by Adobe Firefly, Generative Fill works similarly to a technique called "inpainting" used in DALL-E and Stable Diffusion releases since last year.
Generative Fill isn't the only AI-powered feature added to the Photoshop beta. Firefly has also enabled Photoshop to remove parts of an image entirely, erase objects from a scene, or extend the dimensions of an image by generating new content that surrounds the existing image, an AI technique known as "outpainting."
Generative Fill in the Photoshop beta app is currently available to all Creative Cloud members with a Photoshop subscription or trial through the "Beta apps" section of the Creative Cloud app. It is not yet available for commercial use, not accessible to individuals under 18, not available in China, and currently supports English-only text prompts. Adobe plans to make Generative Fill available to all Photoshop customers by the end of the year so that anyone can make yard clowns with ease.
If you aren't a Creative Cloud subscriber, you can also try Generative Fill for free on the Adobe Firefly website with an Adobe login through a web-based tool. Adobe recently removed the waitlist from its Firefly beta.
Generative Fill is currently in beta testing. It will be available to all users in the second half of the year. You can activate the beta channel from the Creative Cloud application on Windows or MacOS. To do so, launch Creative Cloud and go to the Applications tab. In the left sidebar, the last entry under "Categories" is "Beta Apps."
ffe2fad269