![]() ![]() What Photoshop Elements now provides, with vast improvement over earlier versions, is a nice way to organize and share pictures. Photoshop Elements 5.0 has new editing features, but I wont dwell on them, except to say that the program is still tops. (My first copy came bundled with a scanner over a decade ago.) When the cheaper Photoshop Elements hit the market about five years ago, I was relieved: all of the really complicated stuff was gone, leaving the more intuitive tools I use to clean up or totally mangle a photo. No, Photoshop is not a gadget, but its been a trusted friend to gadget lovers longer than the digital camera has been a consumer reality. So I finally decided to enlist the organizational talents of a program Ive relied on for many years for something else: photo editing. If I want to back up my photos to another drive, I usually just copy the whole mess, or at least the stuff I know isnt yet backed up. Then, when I want a particular photo, I rummage around until Ive found it. Generally, I dump photos into folders that I name and date by hand. Follow it comes to managing digital photographs on a Windows PC, I run into organizational problems.
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