Adobe working on content-aware fill tool for Photoshop
In the demo video, you can see how content-aware spot healing makes things like removing wires from a photo a whole lot easier, but there's also a new version of the fill tool for larger areas. You can use it to scrub out entire trees and big chunks of scenery, and the result seem pretty plausible.
When is this magical new feature coming to Photoshop? Maybe not ever, according to Nack's disclaimer, but it looks far enough along that I wouldn't be totally surprised to see it in the next major version.

I don't know if this is a labor of love or merely the brainchild of four very gifted games designers, but Level Up is a really weird mash-up of gaming elements that you have probably never seen in a Flash game before.
Let's start with the premise itself: Groundhog Day meets Memento. The game experience revolves around 'days': you explore the world and the clock slowly ticks towards the evening. You bounce around picking up gems and talking to the denizens of 'Level Upland'. Eventually you feel tired and head back to ...
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Saint Seminole said 3:34PM on 10-26-2009
It's too bad they usually only release stuff like this in the newer versions of Photoshop, for another $800, instead of releasing them as plug-ins for older versions that we've already paid for...
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Andrew Jones said 4:46PM on 10-26-2009
This can only be described as witchcraft!... I sometimes think that software has reached a technological peak - but I'm still amazed by the innovation in software that is still happening.
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erbmit said 9:19AM on 11-06-2009
Theres no such thing as a peak in software technology. Given enough processing power and data storage, anything that can be described in an algorithm can be solved
alahmnat said 5:02PM on 10-26-2009
Neat. Too bad I've already abandoned Adobe for everything save watching YouTube and Homestar Runner. Their products are bloated, poorly designed, incredibly buggy and unstable, and highly antiquated when compared to the high-quality alternatives that have sprung up over the past couple of years (on the Mac side of the fence, anyway... is there a Windows alternative to Photoshop besides GIMP and Paint.NET?). After using Pixelmator and DrawIt for 15 minutes, I'll never go back to Photoshop again.
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