How does Adobe's new AI image rotation tool compare to something like Midjourney?
They solve completely different problems, so a direct comparison is a bit like asking how a screwdriver compares to a saw. Adobe's new tool, part of their Firefly suite, is about fixing or adjusting an image you already have. It can intelligently rotate a photo and fill in the missing background, like expanding the edges of a landscape shot without cropping anything out. Midjourney, on the other hand, is a text-to-image generator. You start with a blank canvas and a text prompt, and it builds a brand new image from scratch. I've found that the real comparison is in the underlying goal. Adobe's rotation tool is for editors and photographers who need precision and want to stay in a professional workflow. It's a utility. Midjourney is an ideation tool for artists and creators exploring concepts. The insight here isn't which is 'better,' but that the AI tools market is splitting into two lanes: creative generation and practical editing. You'll likely use both, just at different stages of a project. For example, you might generate a hero image concept in Midjourney, then bring it into Photoshop to use Adobe's rotation tool to perfectly frame it for a website banner. They're complementary, not competitors. The real power comes from knowing which tool to reach for and when, not from declaring a winner in a race that doesn't exist.