![]() ![]() ![]() Getting Sensei right is crucial to Adobe’s growth, financial analysts say. “As we understand what they are trying to do and we understand what is the kind of work that inspires them, we can give them intelligent solutions in real time.” “The user doesn’t have to do the hunting and pecking and the looking,” Sharma said. And they could be personalized, borrowing from decisions made at similar junctures by people a user follows on Adobe’s social networking service Behance. Unsure how to make a tweak in a photo? Sensei could anticipate your desire and make suggestions. Sharma imagines Sensei as an instructor too, accepting commands by voice, text or click. Offering “The Simpsons” star Bart as an example, Adobe also showed how Sensei can automatically manipulate a cartoon character’s mouth so that it moves in sync with a voice actor’s speech. It can do the same with fonts, analyzing handwriting to recommend a look-alike typeface.ĭuring editing, Sensei can identify lips and eyes in a photo and allow users to change facial expressions - for instance, widening a grin - without overly distorting the rest of a face. “The heart of Sensei is, ‘Can we make our tools and workflow much more broadly accessible?’”Īt an unveiling spectacle held for thousands of graphic designers, video editors and other users at the San Diego Convention Center this fall, Adobe showed how Sensei could point users to licensable images that resemble ones they like but don’t have permission to use. ![]() “We used to serve the Adobe magic to the highest end of users, but in the mobile-first era, average consumers want that magic,” Adobe Chief Technology Officer Abhay Parasnis said. For instance, Instagram has amassed 600 million users by giving beginning photographers simple ways to give their work a professional look. Adobe expects big interest in Sensei, pointing to popular creative apps as a sign of demand. ![]()
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