Then went on with upgrades, each of which I tested and rejected. ACD Systems seemed to understand that this was not the same old ACDSee, and they rebadged version 2.x as the Classic version and sold it as the tool for people who need something that is fast and efficient. Some features were redesigned and came out worse. Then ACDSee 3 came along, and it became a rocky ride. So I can quickly find my pictures (using its browse and view features), and then launch and load into the editor of my choice. I have shortcuts for all my photo applications right in the ACDSee interface. In fact, it became the command center for all my photo work. I continue to use ThumbsPlus for some tasks. But I must also add that it did not completely replace ThumbsPlus. Pretty soon it displaced ThumbsPlus as my primary image manager. I first tried it out of desperation, when ThumbsPlus developed a problem. It also cached the next image in the file list, to be ready for viewing. So fast that it bragged by showing the load time on the status bar. It started life as possibly the fastest image viewer around. ACDSee is a photo file manager and viewer that runs on the Windows platform.
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