Most of the settings are compatible with Lightroom, and the presets are still stored as XMP files inside their application bundle. Since then, Adobe has revamped their mobile Photoshop Express application, it is now based on the same photo processing pipeline as Revel is. It’s a forgotten brainchild left to fend for itself.Few months back, I posted how to load Adobe Revel presets into Lightroom. Digital Editions isn’t even an afterthought. You’d think a company that put together Photoshop, Dreamweaver, and really, the entire Creative Suite of programmes, would be much more capable at releasing a fully functional ebook management app. Overdrive recommends using Bluefire Reader on the iPad but it synchronises with Dropbox, not Adobe Digital Editions. Still, there’s no cloud synchronisation with a sister app either. There’s no way to directly transfer an ebook from Adobe Digital Editions to mobile devices on a Mac. When I scroll through the ebook, Digital Editions continues with its infuriatingly leisurely scroll. Then when I open an ebook, Digital Editions becomes especially temperamental. List view fares better when scrolling but I remember books by cover designs more than by titles. Yet, scrolling through the library in thumbnail view causes the screen to freeze. Add the ebooks I have on loan and I still don’t hit a hundred within that application. I do have some purchases from Kobo in my Digital Editions library but they aren’t all that many. Slow as Slow Can BeĪdobe Digital Editions is also incredibly slow when it does work. Frankly, I’d rather be in the kitchen than babysit my laptop. I often maximise the loan quota as I search through cookbooks for my next recipe. It’s no fun watching an app crash 17 times. When I add up all the library accounts of my family, I am currently allowed to check out 51 ebooks. When I borrow ebooks and want to download them, it regularly crashes after adding just about three or four books. No other application on my Mac crashes anywhere near as often as Digital Editions does. To explain my grief, let me count the ways Adobe Digital Editions has failed me. The trouble arises when the main application to access these files doesn’t offer a satisfactory solution to access and manage these files. Being locked into EPUB means I have to work with Adobe Digital Editions. When DRM is a Nuisance for ConsumersĪs much as I understand the rationale behind DRM, it has caused me a lot of grief too. If I want to continue borrowing and reading ebooks from these services, I am locked into Digital Editions. This means with my library memberships, I only have access to EPUB and PDF editions. Onleihe doesn’t offer Kindle editions at all. Trouble is, outside of the US, Overdrive doesn’t offer Kindle editions for loan. Theoretically, I could abandon EPUB for Kindle versions and forget about Digital Editions. Why I’m Tethered to Adobe Digital EditionsĪs I already mentioned, most new ebook releases are locked with DRM. Digital piracy, after all, is pretty rampant and it’s only natural that publishers want to protect themselves. That’s the whole point of DRM, to prevent anyone from sharing these files with others by limiting access to one user. Authorising it with your Adobe account will allow you to read an ebook you purchased or borrowed on multiple registered devices. In order to access locked EPUB files on a computer, you need to install Adobe Digital Editions. Basically, these only allow you to access digital media through selected licensed devices. Two dominant systems of DRM are governed by the Amazon Kindle and Adobe EPUB. Even if you break the DRM of an ebook, you still must deal with it. Digital Rights Management (DRM) is a very sticky issue when it comes to ebooks.
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