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it so annoys me the cost of photoshop and light room books , I am paying £120 a year for adobe software and I cant afford the books to use the software it to the full potenial , Im struggling with second hand out of date books ,as i'm not a great fan of trying to follow tutorial videos and using photshop at the same time , i use youtube but clicking backwards and forwards to learn is not the best solution ,
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Perhaps you can understand that book authors have bills to pay too?
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maybe adobe could send a discount price for books once you subscribe to adobe !!
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Adobe is not involved in those books. They are written and published by independent authors and publishers.
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I'm not sure what you are trying to learn:
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thank you for the info
but i am after hardcopies to learn from as i struggle to use ebooks at the same time as using lightroom and photoshop
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thank you for the info
but i am after hardcopies to learn from as i struggle to use ebooks at the same time as using lightroom and photoshop
By @bobone779
Ah, then recognize that a large part of the cost of a hardcover book is in it's production. Not something the author can control. Check out the comparative cost of an book between hardcover and ebook and you will see what I mean. Here's an example. The hardcover is $29.95; the paperback is $14.95 and the eBook is $4.99.
You may want to consider picking up a cheap second monitor from a thrift store to load the eBook onto while you have the Adobe app running on your primary screen. It can be any HDMI old TV as well.
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Correct. I have written 20 (printed) books and as the author I would receive less than 10% of the selling price of my book in a bookstore.
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Keeping up with software training has changed a lot in the last 10 years. Before that, it was almost all books, and some magazines. Now that most software is updated continuously, it’s harder for books to keep up with updates, and almost all print magazines, especially the specialist computer magazines, are gone. There has been an almost total landslide toward videos, because everybody gets YouTube for free, and anyone can upload for free so instead of just the few experts of the past, when a new version comes out there are a wide range of videos about it almost immediately from a lot of sources.
So even though you have trouble with YouTube, because it is one of the best no-budget training options, the long-term solution is probably to make it easier to watch YouTube videos next to your computer screen. In my case, I have two displays connected to my laptop so that I can do one thing while watching another. If you have a tablet, you can put that next to your computer, then it would be a lot like a book.
And this doesn't have to be expensive. That second display I use? It’s over 15 years old and is worth almost nothing now. You can grab any spare display you find at a thrift shop, if it's just for referring to YouTube videos or reading PDF/web manuals while you use the software on your main display. If you already have a TV, you can get a cheap HDMI cable to connect the TV for use as a display for tutorial videos.
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I apologise if it Seems ive been nasty ,but its I need to get more of computer litterate , so once again if ive upset anyone im sorry