2B: The 5 Principles You Need to Know about Using Creative Cloud
- Work at “the speed of thought” with Creative Cloud
- The interfaces, menus, and workspaces are more clean and simple.
- The tools and functions are more intuitive.
- The applications start up in ways that make it easy for beginners to get going.
- The programs are better engineered to be faster and more reliable.
- There are “many paths to god” using Creative Cloud
Not only are there different ways to use different tools within each application, but also you have choices among applications that can accomplish the same tasks. You can edit video within Photoshop, if that works for you, although Premiere Pro was clearly designed to do this better. Likewise, I’ve used Premiere Pro to edit and generate some still images, just because I was more familiar with the functions there which helped me get my work done “at the speed of thought."
This resource is created for students and teachers, and so all its advice is based on the easiest and most reliable ways to accomplish basic tasks, but you can and will eventually discover your own approaches. For example, the video tutorials use pull-down menu commands as often as practical because they’re the easiest to find, but some users might prefer to memorize and use keyboard-command shortcuts instead.
- Creative Cloud works collaboratively, with anyone, on any device
Thus, an extremely powerful and important dimension of Creative Cloud is its collaborative, cloud-based platform. You can easily store work and share it with your team on whatever devices they use, wherever they use them. And when it comes time to “go live,” your work can be easily published or broadcast, especially across social media, because it was developed in the cloud all along.
It’s always stunning to see the magic of Photoshop or Premiere Pro, for example when you completely swap the backdrop of your selfie from the ugly wall of your basement office to the majesty of a gorgeous landscape. We’ve known for a long time that Creative Cloud applications have those awesome powers. But what you’ll find just as magical and powerful are the collaborative and distributed powers of Creative Cloud. When you first start out, it’s difficult to appreciate how important the cloud and all of its synching and library features can be. But once Creative Cloud makes it easy for you and your team to work on a project simultaneously — even from your mobile devices — you’ll begin to appreciate the real power of Creative Cloud.
- The Creative Cloud desktop dashboard manages your applications and account
Creative Cloud has an awesome pop-up menu that makes locating, installing, and running all of your applications efficient and well-organized. If you click that infinity icon, a self-explanatory list of applications pops up (or pops down), which tells you which apps you have installed, which apps you could install, and which apps have updates available. Get used to clicking that icon to manage your Creative Cloud apps. One important note: It’s a good idea to only download the applications you need one at a time, as you need them. Very few of us need all of the Creative Cloud applications downloaded and installed on our computers. Just use the ones you need, even though they’re all part of your Creative Cloud subscription.
As a Creative Cloud subscriber, you also have a web-based dashboard of account settings. You need your online account settings to access some Creative Cloud features such as Behance and Adobe Portfolio, but, most importantly, the dashboard helps you manage your assets and libraries that are synced through the cloud.
- Creative Cloud is one sweet suite
There is no suite of creative applications that are as professional, comprehensive, complementary, and powerful as Creative Cloud — and that’s not a debatable claim, because there is no other collection like it, period.
So, one of the incredible advantages and most powerful features of Creative Cloud is that its applications work together so seamlessly. They’re a matching set. If you’re putting together a magazine layout in InDesign CC and you need to adjust some aspect of a photograph, you don’t need to jump outside InDesign, launch Photoshop, work in Photoshop, then re-import the photograph back into InDesign. These kinds of operations can happen in an instant, “at the speed of thought,” because the applications have such synergy.