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![]() This feature benefits greatly from GPUs that are optimized for machine learning jobs, including CoreML and Windows ML. It's also great for cropping in on photos in your collection to capture tighter shots of elements that previously would've been rendered blurry and disappointing as a result. It'll do that while preserving detail and sharpness, which adds up to allowing you to make larger prints from images that previously wouldn't stand up to that kind of enlargement. The bottom line is that Adobe's Super Resolution will output an image with twice the horizontal and twice the vertical resolution - meaning in total, it has 4x the number of pixels. Adobe has previously offered a super resolution option that combined multiple exposures to boost resolution, but this works from a single photo.Īdobe's Super Resolution comparison photo This is an image-enlarging feature that uses machine learning trained on a massive image data set to blow up pictures to larger sizes while still preserving details. ![]() In addition to the Apple Silicon version of Photoshop, Adobe is also releasing a new Super Resolution feature in the Camera Raw plugin (to be released for Lightroom later) that ships with the software. ![]() Some features are also still missing from the M1-friendly addition, including the "Invite to Edit Cloud Documents" and "Preset Syncing" options, but those will be ported over in future iterations as well. That's just the start, however, since Adobe says it's going to continue to coax additional performance improvements out of the software on Apple Silicon in collaboration with Apple over time. How much better? Per internal testing, Adobe says that users should see improvements of up to 1.5x faster performance on a number of different features offered by Photoshop versus the same tasks being done on previous-generation Macs. ![]() After shipping native versions of Lightroom and Camera Raw, it's now releasing an Apple Silicon-optimized version of Photoshop, which delivers big performance gain versus the Intel version running on Apple's Rosetta 2 software emulation layer. Adobe has been moving quickly to update its imaging software to work natively on Apple's new in-house processors for Macs, starting with the M1-based MacBook Pro and MacBook Air released late last year. ![]()
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