Thanks, Bruce (and Gerrit) that explains a lot.  Seems I was foggy all 
around, since I didn't spell fogie right. Heh. And agree,  Peter, I can do it 
cheaper myself than I could by subscription.

Guess I  better upgrade my LR and Elements before it/they becomes/become 
cloud. Not sure  Elements hasn't already, but one can usually find older 
copies (using 8  now).

Well, I've been a computer programmer, so I have an inherent  distrust of 
the reliability of any computer/computer-related hardware. Uh, they  fail, 
from time to time. One should have lots of redundancy. I trust me to do  that. 
Not sure I would ever trust anyone else to do it as well.

Marnie  aka Doe ;-)

In a message dated 5/31/2013 9:49:31 A.M. Pacific Daylight  Time, 
[email protected] writes:
Marnie, the "Cloud" word is a red  herring. Nobody is requiring you to
save your files anywhere other than than  what you do with them now. So
forget remote server, you save your files on  your PC like you always
have. And your software still runs on your PC just as  always. Nothing
processes In The Cloud somewhere. Once you install Photoshop,  it's biz
as usual.

In this context, "Cloud" is Adobe marketing people  smoking up and
saying, "Oooh yeah! <pfffffff-choke> Cloud is hip! Let's  get that
cloud word in our product name somewhere." It could equally have  been
Creative Unicorns. There are cloudy trimmings in the product, like  the
Behance social site and the fact that you download the software  "from
the cloud". But they are almost completely misusing the word Cloud  as
IT people know it.


Basically Adobe has discontinued selling the  Creative Suite
(Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, etc.) as boxed software.  Instead
they are renting it to us in bundles, like cable TV channel  packages.
So in theory you can get a lot of software for less money per  month
than you used to pay for the entire Creative Suite plus upgrades  every
1.5 years. That's great for professional graphic artists working for  a
Fortune 500 firm.

But for free-lance or amateur photographers who  just want Photoshop
for as little moola as possible, and expect to buy it  like a book that
you keep forever, this move amounts to $20/month to Adobe  for the rest
of your creative life. Because when you stop paying, the  software
stops working. Your Adobe proprietary files become  unreadable.

It should be noted that photographers *should* be saving  their files
in a non-proprietary form, like TIFF, JPEG or even DNG if you  trust
Adobe's intentions for that format. But lots of folks have  projects
saved away in PSD (Photoshop), etc., who want to open and work on  them
from time to time.

Lightroom has been spared this tragic move;  you will still buy it like
a book and pay for individual upgrades.

For  now.


On Fri, May 31, 2013 at 10:40 AM,   <[email protected]> wrote:
> Maybe I am missing something, probably  am, being  the old foggy that I am
> -- but why in the #$%! should I  want to store my photos  on a remote 
server?
> I guess I think I am  missing the point of "cloud." I mean,  thank you 
very
> much, but I  prefer storing my photos on my own computer (and back  up 
hard
>  drives).
>
> Marnie aka Doe
>
> In a message dated   5/30/2013 12:19:12 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
>  [email protected]  writes:
> Now, was that Company A ('80's) or  Company I ('90's)?   ;-)
>
> On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 9:40  AM, Gerrit Visser  <[email protected]> 
wrote:
>> So really  they are saying what I  learned to say at a company we both
>  worked
>> for: "Thank you for your  input". This of course meant  that I mostly
> ignored
>> it  :-)
>>
>>  Gerrit
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>>   From: PDML [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bruce  Walker
>>  Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 9:23 AM
>> To:  Pentax Discuss Mailing  List
>> Subject: Adobe acknowledges cool  reception
>>
>> Adobe  finally issues a brief response to  the Creative Cloud backlash.
>>
>  
http://blogs.adobe.com/creativecloud/our-move-to-creative-cloud-an-update/
>>
>>   In a nutshell:
>>
>>   "Gosh, a few folks don't  like  subscription services. Who knew?"
>>
>>   and
>>
>>   "Golly, photographers are   weird."
>>
>> --
>> -bmw
>>
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>
>
> --
>  -bmw
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