Jammen er "web-grafik-design" ikke også billederedigering?
http://www.webworksite.com/webads.shtml
http://www.webworksite.com/working_with_layers.shtml
http://www.wpdfd.com/issues/38/adobe_photoshop_elements/
http://www.digitalfamily.com/tips/photoshop/index.html
http://graphicssoft.about.com/cs/photoshop/f/elementscompare.htm
Currently Photoshop remains recognized as a standard tool for the
graphics professional, and those who are serious in the field will
often be required to have intimate knowledge of the program. It will be
the common program of choice in a professional or business setting, and
perhaps a less common choice in a private one-unless you are really
demanding in your graphics needs or want a license at home to hone up
on and practice using the program.
Paint Shop Pro is a very good choice for the PC user who wants
power on a budget while getting a little more feature-wise than
Photoshop Elements will provide. This user should be somewhat
self-reliant, able to concoct solutions from Photoshop-centric
materials (because of thinner supply of PSP-centric materials), and
should fear no rebuke or reprimand for using something other than
Photoshop by choice. Almost exclusively a home-user pick for PC.
Photoshop Elements is a good choice for home use tool for those
on a budget, or professionals who don't have pre-press or other volume
imaging demands. It can function as a second Photoshop license to some
degree and can be useful for processing images using actions and batch
functions. It can be a learning tool for those newer to digital images,
and provides room to expand. It can be a logical choice for those who
use Photoshop at work as a less expensive home license option. It is
bi-platform, so is friendly for both Mac and PC users, and it allows
users to tap the broad base of information available to Photoshop users
with more confidence. Though lacking in some features available in
Photoshop and PSP (e.g., pen tool), it has just about all of what you
will need for image processing (lacking a few things such as 16-bit
functionsâ though it will open 16-bit images as 8-bit). a good pick for
most users on many levels.
(http://www.graphic-design.com/Photoshop/lynch/index.html)