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Glevum Owl

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Posts posted by Glevum Owl

  1. 4 hours ago, Paul_Hol said:

    I think you're missing how little, comparatively*, needs to be added to make Affinity Photo work more like Lightroom. Photo already has the core functionality of a raw conversion engine, printing functions and Publisher, via the persona system, could handle book production. Serif would need to add the ability to save develop settings, a glaring omission in Photo now, then just add some DAM functionality.
    Some bells and whistles of Lightroom, like the map and slideshow modules might be harder to bring in, but also their omission won't put very many people off. 

    *Compared to building entirely new products serif has no experience of eg video editing, CAD, etc

    Firstly, Serif has extensive experience of writing video software having spent almost a decade on its Windows-only MoviePlus software.

    Secondly, and more importantly, domink is spot on with his comment. As I mentioned in an earlier post in this thread, a DAM requires an entirely different programming paradigm to any of the current Affinity products. Serif would practically need to start from scratch building a product centred around a database. That takes time and lot of very careful planning to get right first time.

    I'm itching for a fully-integrated, non-Adobe workflow environment as much as the next user but decades of working in IT has taught me that what appears easy on the surface usually isn't.

  2. On 1/13/2021 at 6:01 PM, wonderings said:

    Regarding running old software you could simplify and install Windows as a virtual machine on your Mac and run those good old Win apps on your Mac. With Parallels you could even have it set with a simple button click to run the Windows app so it looks like a native Mac app. They call it coherence. I use it all day long with some Windows apps on my work iMac. 

    AFAIK Parallels for Silicon M1 is only in a technical preview stage currently. Everything on one piece of hardware is too many eggs in one basket. The i3 is ready to go as a hot standby for our home business PC so doubles as my fall back for indispensable Windows apps e.g. FastStone ImageViewer, which I love. A clunky but reliable way to sift photos and do a bit of organising before importing into LR. Runs efficiently on our low spec HP laptop too. In fact, a while back I even considered using it and DxO instead of Adobe stuff but I rely too much on LR for geotagging and finding photos based on metadata. And I moved to Apple.

  3. 1 hour ago, Bryan has left the forum. said:

    Breaking my self-imposed silence and exile from Adobe-land[1] for a bit:

    Ahem, three different platforms… macOS, Windows and iPadOS. I know folks have been wanting a DAM from Affinity for ages, but for me personally I hope they delay any new products for a time, and instead choose to focus on their existing applications—all of which could really use some TLC. There are so many feature requests and workarounds littering these forums—some going back over five years—that just starting to address even a few of these requests, per application, per platform will require a massive investment from Serif.

    Personally, I would rather have 'fewer, nicer things' than lots of mediocre things that require elaborate workarounds and endless compromises.

    I hope Serif chooses to invest wisely, I know I will.

    [1] I recently gave up on all the constant workarounds and inconsistencies of the Affinity range and had to return to Illustrator and InDesign to get some actual work done.

    You're not alone there. I have a few friends who make a living from producing art / designs and all have tried Serif's Affinity range yet returned to Adobe not merely due to familiarity but mainly for functionality. Serif's achievement is to have produced an affordable Adobe alternative for those of us who merely dabble, Photo especially.

    Your points on quality are well made; I have a OneNote folder purely for Affinity tips, tricks, workarounds and gotchas. I'm in two minds about an Affinity DAM: I'd love to completely jump ship from Adobe but am tied to Lightroom which has little to no competition for the way I work. Conversely, Affinity Designer is, for me, not as easy to use as the old Windows-only DrawPlus 8 to which I find myself reverting more often these days. (I recently switched to Apple but keep an old, reliable i3 Win 10 PC to hand for software I can't live without like DP8.)

    My hope is that version 2 of the Affinity programs will bring stability and maturity more than functionality. And perhaps a 'good' DAM will appear somewhere down the line.

  4. Serif currently have to develop and support three major programs on two platforms though they largely follow the same model: create or load a single document or a small number of documents, edit same, save. Whereas Designer, Photo and Publisher share this common model, a DAM is a whole different paradigm involving large numbers of files and some  kind of database. Therefore I don’t hold out much hope of seeing  Affinity DAM until 2022 at the earliest.

  5. 13 minutes ago, EddCh said:

    As a Mac user, I had migrated from Aperture to Capture One Pro earlier in the year. Whilst RAW processing is awesome, unfortunately, C1’s image management is utterly woeful in comparison to Aperture – which I still feel is king when it comes to photo management (makes LR seem like 💩).

    Having previously given up running Aperture on macOS Catalina, I have recently found that it can be patched to run on the very latest OS.

    So, with Aperture running sweetly, I have reverted back to it for basic batch editing, photo and metadata management as well as brainstorming with its unique Lightable feature. 

    I never understood Apple's decision to drop Aperture. So many of my photographer friends used it and a few moved from Windows PCs to Apple iMacs because of it. Staying with Adobe and Windows meant I became the odd one out in our group. LR lumbers on with bugs and annoyances and no one at Adobe listening presumably due to their dominant position. My hopes are still that Serif will provide an LR alternative though I suspect it will be a couple of more years yet before it makes an appearance.

    In the meantime, for any Windows users out there, FastStone Image Viewer provides some basic organisational functionality including sorting on import. The interface is a bit clunky but it's easy to use, fast in operation and free (but if you find it useful send the author a donation).

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