![]() That's all, now I'm still working locally and can still work really fast. Let's say that the client is Acme, okay? So I'm going to come back to InDesign and I'll do a Save As and go to my Creative Cloud Files and save in Acme Proofs. It can only hold up to 20 gigs of file space though. Creative Cloud is like your little mini Dropbox. Just like Dropbox, where you can have a local folder that gets synced to the Dropbox files. On Adobe's server, is where the cloud is. Everything that you put into this Creative Cloud Files folder gets automatically synced to your Creative Cloud space in the cloud. And if you're on Windows you should also have a shortcut in any of your Explorer windows. And you should, if you have a Macintosh have a shortcut here. Let's look at it on my local hard drive, I'll click Open Folder. Or you can also go to your web space that has these files. And here, you can choose to open the folder locally. There is three kind of assets that you have as I record this. And down here in this area, which I don't remember the name of, in Windows. But you can find it quickly by opening up the Creative Cloud app that's up here in the menu bar on the mask. Now, if you don't know where it is it is probably in your User Home folder. ![]() When you installed InDesign, or any CC app, it automatically created a folder on your hard drive. You might not even know that you have a folder called Creative Cloud Files. The way to do it is to, first of all, save it to your local folder called Creative Cloud Files. Now I want to send it to my clients Olivia, for her to take a look at and add comments to. You start with some sort of layout that you're working on for the client, right? This one happens to be something about tea. Let me step you through how simple this is to use. Though, this does require that you're using some version of CC InDesign. It's pretty cool, and I think it's a feature that a lot of InDesign users overlook. So if you've ever sent a proof to a client via email and maybe it's too large to include or you have to include the fonts or you send it PDF and the PDFs too large, you can just ignore all that. Did you know that you can use your free Creative Cloud file space up on Adobe servers? To share InDesign files with your clients for them to look at, perhaps to download, and for them to comment on.
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