
I am not an advanced user so I am mostly speaking from a beginner perspective. These lessons range from the very basic topics like the Photoshop Work Area and Basic Photo Corrections to the very advanced topics like Interactive Slices and Rollovers (advanced at least for the beginner). There are 18 lessons with all lesson files included in the CD that comes with the book. The purpose of the book is to teach you how to use Photoshop 7.0 for the graphics portion of your website design (both Mac and Windows) using a tutorial style approach. Or again use a third party raw converter to generate a tiff file you can load directly into Elements.This book is really like being in a classroom only better because you can stop and start anytime you want. You may be able to use the DNG converter to convert your raw files into a format that ACR 5.6 can read: Unfortunately, recent cameras aren't supported directly: If you mean the later Photoshop Elements 7 rather than Photoshop 7, Adobe Camera Raw is available as a free download, but the last version that will work is 5.6: Some of the camera manufacturers' own converters are free and suprisingly good, like NX Studio from Nikon, or you could look at the free versions of Capture One Express for Nikon, Sony and Fuji, or Open Source alternatives like RawTherapee and Darktable. You can, however, use a third party raw converter to export a tiff file that PS7 can read. This was never updated for modern cameras, and is long discontinued. In the PS7 era, the Camera Raw plugin was an extra product you had to purchase separately. Unfortunately, this update won't help with raw file support. It's fine on a typical laptop with a 1TB or smaller SSD. PS 7.01 works well under Windows 10 as long as you use partitions with <1TB free space for saving files and the scratch disk (it can, however, read files from much larger disks).

I have tested applying this update under Windows 10, and it completes successfully. Most modern web browsers don't support FTP, but you can simply paste that link into a Windows Explorer (file browser) address bar and it will connect, or use a browser like Pale Moon that still supports FTP, or a dedicated FTP client.

If you mean the original Photoshop 7 from 2002, the in-program update and (optional) registration features will no longer work, but you can still download the final update to 7.0.1 (ps701up.exe or one of the regional equivalents) here:
