There is nothing stressed more than this shit: when you got your work on computer, you lose it with any ways like BSOD, Crashes, Damn Blackout, etc and it can’t be recovered. – narcistically me.
Okay, did you ever hope the developers on Adobe creates the Autosave feature into Photoshop? If so, yes, after some investigation by Adobe to Photoshop’s fans on June 22nd, it can be concluded that fans need the Autosave feature. As described on here (lol, another thing to implicitly say I’m lazy):
Dear Photoshop Fans,
On June 22 you shared almost 500 comments in response to the question, “What would you like to see in future versions of Photoshop?” We’ve reviewed your thoughts – yes, each and every one – thank you! You’ve given us some great feedback and today is the second in a series of responses from the team. While we may not be able to answer each individually, we’ll do our best to address what they mean given today’s technology and the potential of what might lay ahead. Please keep the conversation going, we’re all ears!
This week, your comments are being addressed by MBA intern Photoshop Product Manager, Stephen Nielson:
One of the top requests we received from you is to introduce autosave to Photoshop. And why not? How many of us become so engrossed in our work that we don’t save often enough?
The goal for the Photoshop engineers is to enable Photoshop to automatically save in the background without interrupting your work. This is difficult to do, however, because Photoshop files can be as large as 4 Exabytes, or 4 billion Gigabytes—much larger than autosaving a text document or email. Saving large files can take minutes or hours and if it happens when you’re not expecting it, it can severely interrupt your work. We are exploring two features: autorecover and autosave. Autorecover means that a separate copy of the open file would be saved to another location. If the system becomes unstable, Photoshop would recover your work from that file. Autosave means that the open file is saved, which overwrites the existing file. Autosave would actually save a temporary copy first and then overwrite the original, in the event that the system becomes unstable during the save.
Both features would have the option to be turned off and allow you to change the interval at which they occur. Which feature would you prefer, autorecover or autosave or both? How would you use these features? What options would be important to you?
So, are you appreciated with this? For me, personally, yes. Because it will give you a sigh and relax to back on your work.




8/24/2010
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You can submit your comment as I can revise my opinion! Please!!!