![]() You’ll also notice that Affinity Photo renders the photo from the center outwards while in Photoshop it does it row-by-row from the top-left to bottom-right. In Affinity Photo, it has no animation – things appear instantaneously which makes it feel more snappy and I personally prefer that more. In Photoshop, things like the menus and zooming in and out are animated. ![]() ![]() I use that term because it’s not actually faster – it just feels faster. The interface performance on both is great and I don’t experience any lag or slowness. In fact, if you try doing that, it’ll give you a popup message saying that you’re not allowed to cancel or close Affinity Photo until all the photos have been loaded. And unlike Photoshop, you can’t press the ESC key to cancel the loading. It’s just not showing the images as they’re loaded. Something I noticed was that in Affinity Photo, it looks like it’s frozen but it’s not. On the desktop, Affinity Photo was faster by 2 seconds. On a test where we opened 20 files, Photoshop was faster by 6 seconds on the mid-range laptop. It’s not much and you probably won’t notice the difference unless you’re purposely looking for it. On both systems, startup times were faster for Photoshop by a couple seconds. The second system is a high-end desktop with an Intel Core i7 6700K processor, 64GB of RAM, an NVMe SSD, and a Nvidia 980TI video card with 6GB of dedicated VRAM. One is a mid-range laptop with an Intel Core i5 5200U processor, 8GB of RAM, an SSD, and an Intel HD 5500 integrated graphics with 128MB of dedicated VRAM and 4GB of shared VRAM. I’ll be testing the software on two computers. So is Affinity Photo faster than Photoshop? Let’s find out. I did some quick tests to see how Affinity Photo compares to Photoshop performance-wise. On Affinity Photo’s website, they advertise that their software is built on rock solid foundations with principles of performance, stability and lack of bloat. Just click on the Share button, then click on the embed code, copy it, and paste in InDesign.Īlso, you can click on Show Options and decide whether to include things like the title, byline, text link, etc, before copying the code.Affinity Photo is one of the best alternatives to Photoshop especially for people who can’t justify the $10 a month subscription for Lightroom and Photoshop CC. To see an example, check out this Publish Online document, featuring the silly but incredibly popular Pen-Pineapple-Apple-Pen song.īy the way, this same trick for Vimeo videos too. But as long as you have an internet connection, the video will play inside the EPUB. Note that the EPUB will not pass a validation check because the YouTube video is a remote resource not listed in the content.opf file inside the EPUB package. Then export to EPUB 3 and/or Publish Online. You can preview the video in the EPUB Interactivity Preview Panel. Position the video frame where you want it in your layout. That won’t show up in your exported file. Don’t worry if it shows an error message. Then you’ll see a full-size frame where the video will be. At first, you’ll see a small square while InDesign is checking the embed code. ![]() Make sure nothing is selected, and then paste. Then in the controls under the video, click Share, and then Embed.Ĭopy the full embed code. Ever wish you could include YouTube content in an interactive document exported from InDesign? You can do it if you export to EPUB 3 (fixed-layout or reflowable) or Publish Online.įirst, go to YouTube and find the video you want.
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