Thanks for all information!
I think I have not been too successful communicating what problems I ran into by using camera raw.
I have now learned from the post how to exactly convert one or multiple CR2 images into JPEG by using camera raw. That worked wondefully well.
However, I can not get the PSD images to open in camera raw, and I am aware that these PSD images are the new file extension that CS5 created when I made changes to the orginal CR2 files. Since I want to upload these CR2 & PSD files to a web album, I would ceretainly want to include the new PSD files with the changes instead of the orginal CR2 file and that is where the above process of utilizing camera raw did not work for me. My PSD files would not open in camera raw. Since I also wanted to convert some PSD files to JPEG, I had to find another way since it appears that camera raw will not open PSD files because really they are not a raw image directly from your camera anymore. For the process of converting PSD files to JPEG, I think it is probably easier to just open the individual PSD file and then from file>save as..... That is the problem I ran into. Now my question is simple on how do you select and batch together multiple PSD files and make a copy JPEG of them.
Along this journey, I found an easier way to select multiple pictures at the same time and have them all opened in camera raw at once so that you can convert to jpeg. The process I ended up using, utilized Bridge to look at the pictures and make my selections there. Once I had selected only the pictures in Bridge that I wanted to open in camera raw I clicked the button in the top row of bridge that says open in camera raw. I found this easier than opening directly in CS5, since in Bridge I could actually see the image as opposed to the open pop up box in CS5 that does not show thumbs of my CR2 files. Just a different way to get to Camera Raw - then following the steps outlined by Noel!
Dixieman92 wrote: I can not get the PSD images to open in camera raw
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Camera Raw does not normally open .psd files, though you can get it to do so via the File - Open dialog if you choose Camera Raw as the file type. Photoshop itself normally opens these files directly, as you have seen.
You could consider using the Image Processor script (available inside Photoshop via the File - Scripts - Image Processor menu) to do the group conversions.
Also, a performance note: If you have a 64 bit multi-core or multiprocessor system, and open the 64 bit Photoshop, dragging a group of files from Windows Explorer to Photoshop to be opened in Adobe Camera Raw can net you significantly higher performance than by using Bridge.
-Noel