
Joining the ever-increasing list of applications to go cross-platform, Adobe has updated its free Photoshop Express application to include support for Android and the iPad – although it is yet to be updated for the iPhone 4’s higher-resolution display.
For those of you that aren’t aware of Photoshop Express, it’s a simple image editing application that’s designed to give users basic Photoshop features – such as cropping, a touch-up tool, color effects (including black and white effects) and filters – and it’s available for free. Photoshop Express also allows users to store images online at Photoshop.com, or you can choose to directly upload images to sites such as Facebook, Flickr, Picasa and Photobucket.

The applications are part of Adobe’s Photoshop.com ecosystem, which accommodates users of all experience levels, and is presumably aimed at encouraging those users to eventually purchase Adobe’s paid products. For those interested in editing images on their PC, Photoshop.com also offers the Photoshop Online Editor and Organizer, which is a slightly more advanced version of Adobe’s Photoshop Express mobile applications.
Photoshop Express can be downloaded via the App Store / Marketplace on your Apple or Android device now.
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Engadget writes that Adobe has released demo software labelled “FlashTime”, a peer-to-peer video calling solution for Google Android, and any other Adobe Air equipped device.
The release obviously mocks FaceTime for iPhone by Apple, and enables calls between various different camera equipped devices. The video below shows two Android devices using the software, as well as a desktop based client running on top of OS X. Currently, Android has no built in support for video calling, over the air, or even over WiFi — only using third-party applications such as Fring or Qik. “FlashTime” could be a seamless competitor to these as it is multi-platform and based on the AIR framework.
The build that the demo software runs on top is a beta version of Adobe Air 2.5, and is a very early version. Adobe Air 2.5 offers “all the features of Flash 10.1 along with multi-touch/gestures, support for bitmap matrix caching and Geolocation APIs.” According to Hexus, Mark Doherty, Flash Platform Evangelist said that certain features “may not make it into the v1 product.”
On the FlashMobileBlog, Mark also said that “‘FlashTime’ is obviously a working title, and the code isn’t exactly stable so I don’t want to release it just yet. I hope I can finish it by next week, by which time it will have a name – suggestions welcome.”

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