

With CS6, Adobe will be associating serial numbers with Adobe IDs rather than the computers the software is installed on. That follows the lead of GPU card manufacturers who are no longer releasing drivers for their newest cards, Gee said.Īfter downloading, Photoshop CS6 requires a one-time login with an Adobe ID to activate the product, which you can create at that time if you don't have one. Some GPU-enabled features and 3D features are not supported on Windows XP, Adobe noted.

Intel Premium 4 or AMD Athlon 64 processor.Internet connection and registration (with an Adobe ID) required for software activation.1024x768 (1280x800 recommended) display with 16-bit color and 256-MB (512-MB recommended and required for Photoshop Extended) VRAM.System requirements have been bumped up a bit with 32-bit support dropped on Mac OS. Gee said the beta is based on Photoshop CS6 Extended with features like 3D editing and quantitative image analysis.

Zorana Gee, Photoshop product manager, said that while the CS5 release was all about converting to a 64-bit architecture and tapping into the GPU pipeline, this release is a much deeper one, focused on features.Īvailable as a free download from Adobe Labs, the beta period is expected to continue through the first half of the year. The new version features 62 percent more new features than the previous version, over 64 user-inspired enhancements and the new Adobe Mercury graphics engine to rev up performance, the company told us during a recent briefing.
