The next change introduced is the way that PhotoLab 5 can interact with other programs such as Lightroom. ![]() Now anything defined at a higher level will automatically be applied to the image and the keyword selected. Once defined, right-click on any keyword and take the option ‘Apply keyword to image’. PhotoLab 5 has a much more intuitive way of creating and adding keyword lists. The addition of Keyword lists is something that is in Lightroom but doesn’t work particularly well. Now, if I wanted to apply keywords for this subject, then I would add, Kelpies Falkirk, Scotland, United Kingdom Looking at keywords first, I was out taking pictures of the Kelpies, some enormous sculptures of horses in Falkirk. If I go back to my initial way of considering software, these are two things that Lightroom doesn’t do as well. There are two significant changes to the way PhotoLab 5 manages metadata and keywords. You can see the before and after in the image below – I think it does a pretty good job! It isn’t too different to the way a camera ‘processes’ a JPEG file. Unlike many raw editing programs, PhotoLab uses its database of lenses to make automatic changes by reading the metadata about the camera information and enhancing the image. It can apply general and localised edits to photographs and allow the simple editing of meta-data to the files. Where does it fit into my current workflow, and does it enhance or hinder how I edit? PhotoLab 5 closely aligns with the editing I do in Adobe Lightroom. When I am trying out new software, I try to find the use-case for it. We’ve had a sneak preview of both packages to see how they can help the editing process. ![]() Today (20 October), it is launching an update to two of its tools PhotoLab moves to version 5 and FilmPack upgrades to version 6. Over time, it also began to produce photo-editing software that used the data from its lens testing business to correct photos. My suspicion is my next step from here is to use Hazel or Folder actions to create an automatic scale-and-copy action, for each iOS camera folder, when it receives new entries, to generate the lower-res versions, and syncing those back based on Folder, rather than Aperture / Photos libraries.DxO started life as a photography consultancy, where it gained a reputation for testing and benchmarking lenses. Though, currently I’m solving this by using saved searches / smart folders stored on my external photo storage drive, which physically stores images in folders based on camera, then year, month, day. Peakto looks like it solves the problem of needing a meta-library that can see all the images in all your different post-Aperture solutions. Photos: Lacks multidisplay workflow(?) and advanced organisation, doesn’t handle referenced libraries the way Aperture could, but can import / export from iOS devices. achieve all of this without using a cloud service.Ĭapture One: supports all my image types, from iOS devices, my DSLR, has great image processing engine etc, but can’t import from iOS devices directly, nor can it integrate with iTunes etc to export back to the iOS device. automatic export for iOS devices, where scaled quality versions specific to the device that made them, can be synced back to the device - so my iPhone images go back to my iPhone, iPad images to iPad etc manual and saved search automatic organisation of images. view all those images chronologically, so I can browse my life vis photography. import images direct from camera to the catalog structure. The real issue is that since Aperture, no one application can do everything, for every camera. That’s why Peakto is not available as a free download.Īrtificial Intelligence Mac Mac App macOS 12 Monterey Peakto Photography Statistics show that 95% of software downloads do not result in actual use.Īt almost 700Mb per download that’s a lot of energy cost for the planet…. You have to pay before you can download the trial: Instants act like a magic wand, allowing you to find all versions of a shot and bring them together instantly, while giving you invaluable insight on the story of your edits. Instants will gather under one roof all the master files and all the modified versions of an original shot. ![]() Thanks to image recognition, Panorama categorizes all your photos, whatever their format or location, and gives you a smart overview without modifying the arrangement of your catalogs. Panorama, a new feature introduced in Peakto, puts the power of AI at your service. Without creating extra copies of your images. Peakto is the control tower that regroups your catalogs from Apple Photos, Aperture, Lightroom Classic, Luminar AI/Neo, Capture One, iView Media–and from your folders. Opening Peakto is like opening all your catalogs at once and seeing all your images in ONE app.
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