Adobe is redesigning the training streams, making their applications "viral"

Adobe announced at its annual Adobe Max Creative Conference that streaming capabilities will be built directly into Creative Cloud applications. A beta version of these features is already available to a select group of users on the Fresco art app. All it takes is to go live and share the link online to engage viewers and allow the audience to leave text comments during the broadcast.

Adobe is redesigning the training streams, making their applications "viral"

Product manager Scott Belsky likened the experience to Twitch, but with an educational twist, allowing users to filter videos that explain how to use certain tools. The idea is to record user actions in parallel with screen capture: what tools are selected, how they are configured, what combinations are used - all this can be displayed on the screen, and also get into the search settings.

Adobe currently offers Adobe Live training streams available through Behance and YouTube, making it easy to watch a training video at work. Live streams can often last up to three hours. But the company says that the average viewing time for any video on Adobe Live is 66 minutes. Therefore, some entries show a timeline that shows which tools were used during the entire workflow.

Adobe is redesigning the training streams, making their applications "viral"

Adobe Live Streaming is designed to be more than just watching YouTube videos. “Designers say they learned by sitting next to designers, not by going to design school. We just have to scale this approach. It will also make our products go viral,” Scott Belsky explained.



Source: 3dnews.ru

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