I envision this being implemented as a single "Remove distractions" button and menu option, with configurable options to control what Lightroom should look for (and ignore). My answer to this prompted a follow-up question asking what kind of distractions I most commonly remove, including options for dirt and dust, telephone poles, birds and insects, skin wrinkles, trash and lampposts, text and logos on clothing, etc. Does however sound like a more useful tool than the Web and Slideshow interfaces currently in Lightroom Classic (does anyone still use those?) #7 - Distraction identification: Automatically detect distractions in photos and make suggestions for removal or suppression Perhaps this would be helpful to photographers who need to append annotations or notes for clients to their exported images, but I can't see myself using it. My answer: I am not interested, it doesn't really benefit me #6 - Simple text: Adding text to a photo, to create a caption or meme, etc Assuming Adobe does something similar, Lightroom could automatically adjust lighting, brighten skin tone, lift shadows and/or lower highlights, increase midtone contrast, or other options that simplify and automate edits. This sounds to me like the auto adjustment tools in DxO Photo Lab, a different raw photo editing application I produced a video about a while back. #5 - Adaptive Auto Tone: enhancements to Auto Tone that can apply adapted edits based on the contents or histogram of image Could see this being implemented as another AI masking tool similar to "Select Sky" and "Select Subject" currently in Lightroom. Not the type of feature I would use all that frequently, but could see being popular with product and portrait photographers. If there was a "I am interested, but not for me" option, I would have picked that. #4 - Background removal: remove part or entire background of an image I'd rather see this added to Adobe Bridge. I feel that there are already plenty of applications and services out there for creating GIFs (including Photoshop and Premiere), so I'm not sure why Lightroom would offer it. My answer: I would be disappointed if Adobe spent time on this #3 - GIFs: convert a series of images or short video clips into a high resolution GIF Probably wouldn't be one-click-and-done, but at least a good head start. Perhaps Lightroom could offer a menu of "looks" built from prior edits, with previews to automatically apply to new images. How heavy their contrast typically is, how they set their black and white points, split toning, vignette, and other adjustments. I feel like I've seen this functionality in some other product or plugin, but this sounds like a time-saving tool that could "learn" how a Lightroom user typically edits their images over time. My answer: I am interested and would be excited to see this #2 - Personalized edit style: suggest adjustments based on my previous edits Hard to tell what exactly they're describing, but anything that makes editing color easier and more intuitive is all good with me. Could be something where background colors automatically change to complement the color of a subject, or something to that effect. Their description is rather vague, but reading between the lines, I think what Adobe is alluding to here is the use of artificial intelligence to intelligently modify color hue, saturation and luminosity (and perhaps the shadow, midtone and highlight wheels in the color grading panel as well) to achieve specific creative looks. #1 - Color improvements: deeper color capabilities that give more control and help with color harmonization Here are the feature ideas from the survey along my answers and thoughts.
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