When we talk about Adobe’s "Glory Days," the conversation usually revolves around Photoshop CS5 (hello, Content-Aware Fill) or After Effects CS5 (the birth of 64-bit). But sitting quietly in the Start Menu, often ignored, was a little app with a big job:
If you entered the design world between 2010 and 2012, you remember the love/hate relationship with Bridge. It felt slow to launch, looked like a file explorer on steroids, and nobody really knew how to use it properly. bridge cs5
Liked this retro review? Check out our post on "Why Adobe Fireworks CS5 deserved better." When we talk about Adobe’s "Glory Days," the
While it’s fun to fire up a Windows 7 virtual machine for nostalgia, Bridge CS5 is 16 years old. It doesn't support modern RAW formats (like the Canon R5 or Sony A7IV), it crashes on macOS past Mojave, and the lack of modern GPU rendering makes it feel sluggish. Liked this retro review