Subject | Re: post processing |
From | Tony Cooper |
Date | 03/17/2014 13:29 (03/17/2014 08:29) |
Message-ID | <81qdi9p509anhalqskqa7cqu8d57g8412o@4ax.com> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | rec.photo.digital |
Follows | Sandman |
Followups | nospam (23m) > Tony Cooper Sandman (30m) > Tony Cooper |
SandmanYup. Only Adobe can call a plug-in a "Photoshop Plug-in". The rest should call theirs "Plug-in for Photoshop".
In article <uu5ci9h9ei8p9ka75f3smsqslh5qd1hv2m@4ax.com>, Tony Cooper wrote:SandmanTony CooperSandmanTony CooperTony CooperSandman
No, each plug-in listing tells you who developed the plug-in. Adobe is specifying that they didn't develop them.
But you just said that only Adobe can make Photoshop plug-ins, and that page lists Photoshop plug-ins. Tricky situation you've gotten yourself into!
Right. Only Adobe can call plug-in an "Adobe Plugin", but they can approve vendors as suppliers of plugins for Photoshop. The plugins on that page are evidently plugins that Adobe has approved for use with Photoshop. Strange that some of the most-used plugins are not listed.
Wow, you just dug yourself even deeper. Now you're saying "Adobe Plugin", but this is what you said before:
Yes, it's a typing error on my part. The mind said "Photoshop Plug-in" and the fingers said "Adobe Plug-in".
So you're still on record with the hilarious comment that only Adobe can call a plug-in a "Photoshop plug-in"?
So, are thesde your statements, then:Never said that.
1. Only Adobe can make Photoshop plug-ins