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Adobe MAX Links the Constellations of Creativity and Community

Adobe MAX Links the Constellations of Creativity and Community

Update: 2024-10-16
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“Cause you’re a sky, ’cause you’re a sky full of stars” – Coldplay 


That song, from 10 years ago, has likely been utilized in the echoing opening videos at Adobe MAX. The tone is inspiring, deep, expansive, and, unlike space, loud. We are worlds away from Los Angeles. We might even be worlds away from our day to day work. We’re on the beach (or on a boat). We’re dipping our toes in the waves. We’re enveloped in humidity blankets. Our glasses and our lenses are fogging up.


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In this space, pun intended, we’re allowed to seek new connections, bonds, and constellations. We consider how we can proactively, uniquely, and quickly establish links and workflows between products, opportunities, and colleagues, in the efforts of creativity and community.


In this ecosystem, Adobe actually pushes us not just to the cloud but into space itself: dancing astronauts graced the MAX morning key note, isolated from their background courtesy of mask tracking, a yet-to-be-announced-but-lets-show-you-here-on-the-stage-anyway feature in Premiere. Just 12 hours before, I begged to the editing gods to let there be a mask tracking tool directly in Premiere. And so, as the radio pleaded in the Uber on the way to the Miami Convention Center that very morning, “Don’t Stop Believing.”


As we look to the future, space or otherwise, AI and technology provides an opportunity to focus on problem solving. It is an intention that has been ingrained into Adobe’ approach and the Generative AI products in Premiere.


“When it comes to, what’s the first generative AI experience really going to be in Premiere Pro, we were heartfelt about making sure that these solutions that are natively built into the app authentically solve daily problems that video editors face,” Jason Druss, Senior Product Marketing Manager of Video at Adobe shared while walking through Premiere’s new features. Adobe’s new Generative Extend developed out of conversations with editors and what they need most. “You’ll be hard pressed to find any video editor who’s been working for more than six months, who hasn’t run into the problem where you need to apply a transition and you don’t have enough footage to cover all the time, or you replace take four with take five, or an actor messed up an eye-line, or the camera shook, or just the clip’s not long enough, and now you have that little annoying gap. You want to stay in the zone. You want to stay in your creative flow. And these problems, just are a brick wall that force you to stop having fun. How can we use generative AI to eliminate as much of that pain as possible?” (This pain we’re referring to is not, it should be noted, to be confused with T-Pain who is performing at Adobe Bash). 




While Druss walked me through the demo, also featuring astronauts in space, he reminded me that Generative Extend could also solve the audio headache  every filmmaker has had… not enough room tone! Ever needed a few more frames of room tone? We all have. Even if you said no. 


As the astronauts explored on screen in the demo material, I couldn’t help but wonder what space (pun intended), or vast gray area we walk into when it comes to ethics and actors. Do we need to say anything if we’re using AI to generate more content, or in Firefly’s case, video content from the talent we work with? Will something I apply generation extend to be used as training material. Druss, and Adobe, are very clear: “We are not training the model on customer data. If you use Generative Extend, we’re not training off of that clip under any circumstances,” Druss shared. “Not only are these tools designed to solve problems authentically, but also are commercially safe to use and done with the absolute highest ethics, safety, trust and responsibility in mind.”


These novel AI features are partly what propelled first-timers to land on the moon of MAX for the first time. “I wanted to see what’s the latest and the greatest. And I was really hoping that Adobe would show off the video AI capability. And they did.” shared Brian Denny, Assistant Professor of Digital Media Design at Florida Gulf Coast University. “I really like what Adobe is doing with AI. Seems to me like Adobe is making it safe for a classroom setting,” Denny shared after attending an Adobe MAX Networking Event for for first time MAX-goers. His table mate, Frank Robertson of South Dakota State University, was also drawn by the new AI capabilities. “AI, it’s one of the focuses that I’m looking at while I’m here, taking as much sessions as I can, because as a photojournalist and someone who teaches visual storytelling to my Students, that generative AI content is really interesting.” Robertson had attended MAX online before, but couldn’t pass up the opportunity to come in person this time to Miami. “The online offering is fantastic. But just I wish I could be there. I wish I could experience this. And so it’s great to be here, to be here to experience these spaces, these places and these things.”


These spaces and places can provide the needed inspiration for creatives, and that goes beyond our day to day work in creative products as Izzaldeen Mohammad shared. “What inspires me to see, other people, how they think, how they work, see different mentalities, different cultures, so inspiring to me, like not just the tools I see here. So like, communicating, networking, yes, it’s all amazing.”


First-time attendee Nicole Bodkin expressed her delight to be at MAX. “I’ve used Adobe products since I was in middle school and so to be able to come now and, my company sent me over, was just an awesome opportunity. And I was so excited when I they told me I could go. So now I’m overwhelmed by all the options, and just excited to learn and meet people.” And off she quickly went, a comet creating trails and ties along the way. 


For a galactic enterprise of sorts, pushing the boundaries of technology, on Day 1, Adobe’s focus seemed remarkably human, physical, and concrete. Hype videos showcased photographers developing film, graffiti art, and other tethers to physical products and outcomes. We’ve come out of space, and landed on the ground, as a human making footprints with our new communities. As Chair and Chief Executive Officer Shantanu Narayen noted in the first keynote that all the artwork shared was “human created art at its core and remixed with AI.” 


At MAX, we’ve come out of the clouds, or cloud depending on whether we’re referring to Frame.io, and re-established our relationships and significant connections and constellations. An initial hello yields abundance. A warmth transcends MAX; it is gentler than the humidity and more like the soft beach water. Big hugs. High fives. Comfort. Belonging. 


It’s the kind of community that can make internal jokes, like calling a project “Final_Final_Final” in the keynote. It’s the kind of community that invites you to it, such as Sandisk who is looking to partner with creatives to share their new kit. Offering a custom SD card case that looks like a 256GB card, created by Michael Hoang, Senior Manager of Content Strategy at Western Digital.


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Adobe MAX Links the Constellations of Creativity and Community

Adobe MAX Links the Constellations of Creativity and Community

Michelle DeLateur