Apparently not wanting to be left behind, Adobe today also released a trio of updates for Photoshop, Lightroom, and Bridge on the Mac.
Significantly absent from the Photoshop change log was any mention of a solution to the odd cursor and toolbar text-entry issues that have continued to plague some users of the product. [UPDATED]
A complete list of Photoshop fixes appears after the jump.
Adobe addressed the following issues in the Macintosh version:
- The speed of moving objects contained within multiple layer sets has been improved.
- Converting images to CMYK using certain profiles no longer results in black files. The Save for Web feature now includes an option to "Include XMP" (metadata) in the settings menu within the main Save for Web interface, making the existing capability easier to access.
- When using Save For Web with "Include XMP"; enabled, all XMP data is now included in the optimized file.
- Print color matching has been improved.
- Images saved as DICOM and reopened in Photoshop CS3 are no longer corrupted on PowerPC based Mac computers.
As with the Leopard 10.5.1 update, it's possible that "minor" changes didn't make the main list, and that the Photoshop update OR the Leopard 10.5.1 update have fixed the problems we've been having.
Photoshop seems to be behaving for now, but the as the problem was intermittent there's currently no way to know for sure.
If you've been having the aforementioned cursor or text-entry problems with Photoshop under Leopard, and those problems persist AFTER you've installed 10.5.1 and the Photoshop updates, then leave me a comment here, okay?
The Adobe updates are now live, and can be accessed as usual via the Adobe Updater utility.
[ UPDATED]
Adobe has acknowledged that the text-entry bug has has yet to be fixed, see Leopard's Photoshop CS3 Issues: Update Coming
Also, apparently Adobe's engineers have been busy on the printing side, and have published their own list of changes made in 10.0.1. [PDF]
[via PhotoshopNews]
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