

With Capture One 4.0 said to be coming in the Spring, it’s set to be an exciting year for digital photographers. And contrary to what the name might suggest, it’s not bundled with Photoshop or the Creative Suite packageit’s sold only as a standalone program and isn't meant to replace Bridge, which is to stay on as Adobe’s image browser and basic RAW batch processor.įor existing Aperture users, a lot of the above features probably sound familiar, but expect the coming Lightroom plug-in development kit (Photoshop plug-ins are not compatible with Lightroom) to put more than a bit of heat on Apple, which hasn’t released any plug-in SDK for Aperture beyond export modules. It should be noted that while Camera RAW 3.7 will preserve Lightroom's advanced edits (clone/heal, split toning, etc.), you will still need Lightroom to edit them beyond just keeping or tossing them out in CR. The 1.0 Photoshop Lightroom interface: mime sold separately This will add support for Lightroom’s advanced edits as well as RAW support for the Nikon D40, Nikon D80, Canon EOS 400D Rebel XTi, EOS Kiss Digital X and the Pentax K10D. Full cross-compatibility with Photoshop Camera RAW 3.7, which will be a downloadable upgrade released at the same time.More connection between actual disk structure and what you see within the application.Curves show more range information for selected areas.New Key Metadata Browser for quick tagging and rating.Improvements to Develop, Slideshow, Printing and Web output.Snapshots and multiple settings for same RAW file.People who’ve already built libraries around the the beta will be relieved to know that it doesn’t expire until February 28 and existing libraries will be updated for use by the 1.0 app.īut enough exciting retail info, here are some of the things you can expect to see added or updated in Lightroom since the last public beta version: Those looking for a deal can get it at an introductory price of $199 until April 30, and a free trial will also be available for download as of the 19th. Lightroom will be sold for $299 (not coincidentally the same price as Aperture) and you can preorder it now. While Lightroom will run fine on Vista, users will need to wait for a free update for full disk burning support to work. The Windows and Universal Mac versions of Lightroom are coming simultaneously with recommended system requirements being a Mac with Mac OS X 10.4.3, 1GHz PowerPC G4 processor or a Windows machine with Windows XP SP2, an Intel Pentium 4 processor, 768MB RAM and a 1024 x 768 resolution display. Well it's official: after an initial public beta test that seems to have gone pretty smoothly, Adobe's first major RAW-oriented photography workflow app is set to hit the shelves on February 19.
