**** UPDATE ****
We are currently in the process of restoring the forum and wiki. Stayed tuned.
EventGhost has so many features we dare
not list them all.
So here are a couple of the top ones.
Over 300 plugins.
Runs on Microsoft Windows.
Real time Python scripting.
Event based.
Portable.
Scheduling.
Media Control.
Audio Control.
Lighting Control.
Keyboard/Mouse Emulation.
Technically, CS6 represented the perfection of a specific workflow philosophy. It was the era of the 64-bit native rewrite, allowing programs like Photoshop and Premiere Pro to break the RAM barriers of the past, handling massive files and high-definition video with unprecedented fluidity. It introduced the Mercury Playback Engine, freeing video editors from the tyranny of rendering timelines just to preview an edit. For designers, the introduction of the Content-Aware Move tool in Photoshop felt like the first whisper of artificial intelligence entering the creative sphere—a magic trick that felt less like a tool and more like a digital assistant. CS6 was stable, robust, and incredibly powerful. It was software designed to be mastered, not merely used.
It was a typical Monday morning for Emily, a freelance graphic designer and photographer. She woke up early, got her coffee in hand, and sat down at her desk to tackle the day's tasks. As she booted up her computer, she couldn't help but think about the project she was working on - a branding campaign for a new startup.
One of the biggest draws of CS6 was its focus on modern technology. It was the first suite to truly embrace Retina displays and 64-bit native support across both Windows and Mac platforms. This meant that for the first time, creative professionals could fully utilize the high-performance RAM and processing power of modern workstations, leading to significantly reduced rendering times and smoother multitasking.