Close Menu
Daily Guardian
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
What's On

Remembering, rebuilding 1 year after the Lac du Bonnet, Man. wildfire

May 13, 2026

Canadian Grand Prix organizers prepare for earlier race date, possible Habs run

May 13, 2026

Sony ups its new A7R VI to 66.8 megapixels and jumps the price to $4,500

May 13, 2026

Vancouver mayor clarifies ’11 AI agents’ used to do work is strictly personal

May 13, 2026

Danielle Smith rejects Alberta judge’s ruling against separation petition as ‘anti-democratic’

May 13, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Finance Pro
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
Daily Guardian
Home » Adobe’s new AI Assistant marks a ‘fundamental shift’ in creative work
Technology

Adobe’s new AI Assistant marks a ‘fundamental shift’ in creative work

By News RoomApril 15, 20263 Mins Read
Adobe’s new AI Assistant marks a ‘fundamental shift’ in creative work
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Adobe is fully embracing AI tools that enable creators to edit their work using descriptive prompts, instead of manually using specific Creative Cloud apps. The software giant’s new Firefly AI Assistant allows users to describe what they want to change by typing their own words into a conversational interface.

Adobe says this marks a “fundamental shift in how creative work is done” by removing skill barriers and laborious tasks, while still giving creatives full control over their work. It’ll be “available soon” on the Firefly AI studio platform according to Adobe, though no specific launch date was provided in the announcement.

The unified AI interface, which builds on the Project Moonlight experiment that Adobe introduced at its Max conference last year, automatically performs “complex, multi-step workflows” to edit projects, utilizing specific tools and apps (including Firefly, Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, Express, Illustrator, and more) on the user’s behalf.

Users of the Firefly AI Assistant can instruct the chatbot to “retouch this image” or “resize this for social media,” for example, with Adobe’s AI agent then providing a selection of edits to choose from alongside surfacing specific tools or sliders that allow creators to fine-tune the results. For more detailed adjustments, creatives can also open the edited results in Creative Cloud apps to finish the project.

The Firefly AI assistant will learn the user’s preferences over time, such as preferred tools, workflows, and aesthetic choices, to help make the results feel more personalized and consistent. Adobe’s AI chief Alexandru Costin told The Verge that creatives will be able to choose whether to enable this feature, and can select specific projects for the AI assistant to learn from. Creatives can also create “Creative Skills” — tools that provide specific and consistent presets — that the AI assistant can execute, or select from a library of pre-made skills at launch.

This is Adobe’s latest push into the world of AI agents, having already launched specific AI assistants for apps like Adobe Acrobat, Express, and Photoshop. Adobe says it will also bring these agentic features to third-party AI apps like Anthropic’s Claude, allowing those users to access Adobe tools outside of its own Firefly and Creative Cloud platforms.

This announcement comes alongside some new image, video, and audio editing capabilities for Adobe’s Firefly platform, which are rolling out starting today. The Firefly Video Editor is now integrated with Adobe Stock for easy access to B-roll footage, and allows users to access new features for improving color adjustments and the clarity of spoken dialogue. New editing features are also available in the Firefly image editing tool — Precision Flow, which enables creators to make and compare a wider range of generated images without adjusting their prompts, and a new AI Markup tool that lets users control where edits should be made using brush and rectangle tools or reference images.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Sony ups its new A7R VI to 66.8 megapixels and jumps the price to $4,500

YouTube is courting creators — and sponsors — with streaming shows

Microsoft’s Edge Copilot update uses AI to pull information from across your tabs

AMD’s best CPU tech for gamers is coming to workstations too

The crypto Clarity Act returns to the Senate this week. The banks are already trying to kill it.

Everything at The Criterion Collection is 30 percent off right now

Instagram hits the copy button again with new disappearing Instants photos

Mark Zuckerberg announces ‘completely private’ encrypted Meta AI chat

Microsoft is trying to stay out of Musk v. Altman

Editors Picks

Canadian Grand Prix organizers prepare for earlier race date, possible Habs run

May 13, 2026

Sony ups its new A7R VI to 66.8 megapixels and jumps the price to $4,500

May 13, 2026

Vancouver mayor clarifies ’11 AI agents’ used to do work is strictly personal

May 13, 2026

Danielle Smith rejects Alberta judge’s ruling against separation petition as ‘anti-democratic’

May 13, 2026

Latest News

YouTube is courting creators — and sponsors — with streaming shows

May 13, 2026

PHR DEADLINE ALERT: Faruqi & Faruqi, LLP Reminds Phreesia (PHR) Investors of Securities Class Action Deadline on July 13, 2026

May 13, 2026

Old National Introduces ‘Team Old National’ PGA TOUR and NCAA Golf Ambassadors

May 13, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian Canada. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version