As an event photographer that will save me a lot of "back and forth" when I'm dealing with tricky "matching" issues to get consistency within a set of images. Similar to Compare View: you can select a "reference image" which stays up while you move through and edit the rest of your images. I'll do a bit of testing, but I'm pretty pleased with the latest update.Īnd the new Reference mode is fantastic. It is now so quick I'm considering changing my whole workflow (I currently import and cull in Bridge, then import into Lightroom) to Lightroom only. And the longer I left Lightroom open the slower my computer would get.Īll that went away with the latest update.
When I shut down Lightroom manually I also had to terminate Lightroom in the Task Manager as well because it JUST WOULDN'T DIE. its funny you say that because version 6.8 (released a few days ago) has turned Lightroom from a resource hog (if I started a large export I had to walk away from the computer until it was finished because the computer became unusable) to incredibly quick. Granted, I have a pretty large number of images, but even on top end Macs it is slowing to a crawl. Newer versions of Lightroom have been getting slower. I sure wish I had had the wit to think of it, since the adoption of Win 95 the use of non GUI batch files has really fallen out of favour, back in the days of DOS 6.2/Win 3.11 a batch file would have probably been the very first suggestion.
#Lightroom 6.2 dehaze o dau .exe
exe complied program, there are ways to easily do this, or there were in the past, but since the whole thing is very IO intensive I'm not sure the speed improvement will be that significant, I would expect that the performance limit will be from the disk subsystem, and waiting for the DNG converter to do its thing. A very elegant answer to the issue, the only thing that might make an improvement to the performance would be to convert from the scripted batch file, to a full on. JPEG files from the card to his prefered drive location, running the CR"s through the DNG converter on the way, and automatically importing them into his LR catalogue. He wrote his own little custom file downloader, that moves both.
#Lightroom 6.2 dehaze o dau manual
I think a simple DOS batch file (.bat) solved the OPs problems with using his 80D files with the DNG converter, without the need to make a manual intervention each time he downloaded his files from the SD card.