Click on any phrase to play the video from that point.
[Bryan O'Neil Hughes, Senior Product Manager-Photoshop] New to Photoshop CS5
is a great feature called Mini Bridge.
Essentially what it is, is Bridge running in a panel.
What I can do is, I can pull that out of the doc here.
I can have it be it be its own stand-alone.
I can even come in and set that up like a filmstrip.
I can put it on a separate monitor.
I can stretch that out, and what it's allowing me to do is
harness all the power of Bridge to look at all different sorts of file formats,
but have them running directly here in Photoshop.
I can even do some multi-image operations here,
so if I were to come in to this HDR folder,
I can multi-select these files and try the new merged HDR Pro,
and it will send those files immediately into our new HDR feature.
And there's a great hidden gem here where if I take one of these files,
and I drag and drop it out of Bridge,
it will paste it in there as a layered file.
If you're a designer and you're moving a lot of files and you're dropping in a lot of layers,
this is an enormous timesaver.
You don't have to open each individual file.
You can just drag-and-drop them straight out of Mini Bridge.
So there you have it--Mini Bridge, a stand-alone application running in a panel
right there in Photoshop.
The ability to do multi-file operations, preview all of your files, and even some cool hidden gems
like dragging and dropping files in their own new layer--
huge timesaver right there in Photoshop CS5.
