Adobe’s browser-based ‘Photoshop on the web’ has finally launched after spending two years in beta – but the photo-editing tool still requires a hefty monthly subscription, despite previous rumors of a freemium version. The good news for Creative Cloud subscribers who need a web-based version of Photoshop – hello, Chromebook fans – is that Photoshop on the web has launched with two of Adobe’s most useful AI-powered tools, Generative Fill and Generative Expand. The former can add new objects to your images with a simple text prompt, while the latter lets you broaden an image to add more information to a scene (it’s a bit like a reverse of the traditional crop tool). While Photoshop on the web is a more basic version of the desktop program, these tools do sit alongside staples like ‘remove background’, the spot healing brush, and layers-based editing. As images are saved in Creative Cloud, you can also access any in-progress files from any computer […]