It’s enough for on-screen display, social media and editing – any editing changes you make are synchronised back to the original image in the Lightroom catalog on your computer. Second, it only synchronises a lower-resolution Smart Preview. First, you can sync Collections, but not your whole catalog, so you don’t get to see your entire catalog online or in your mobile app. Lightroom Classic can synchronise images too, but in a different and more limited way.But it comes at a cost, and you are reliant on an Internet connection to access full resolution versions of images not cached locally on your computer. Lightroom is fully integrated with Adobe’s web and mobile apps, so that you don’t just see all your photos, they’re displayed in the same Collections across all your devices – your organisational system is preserved too. Lightroom’s web-first approach means paying a higher subscription to use Adobe’s online storage, but it also means all your images are available everywhere, in their original format and at their full resolution.Sharing images from Lightroom Classic is more limited. With Lightroom your whole image library is online and available to your mobile devices and online via a web browser. Your images are stored locally on your own computer’s disk drives, and while you can synchronise images in a more limited way with Adobe’s Lightroom Web and Lightroom Mobile tools (see the next section), Lightroom Classic takes a ‘desktop first’ approach where online synchronisation is a useful add-on rather than being central to the whole software. ![]() ![]()
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