![]() ![]() If you find RPP useful you are welcome to make a fair donation. Here is the text from RPP''s website regarding the donation: It is currently in v3beta, and v3 is a really nice improvement. ![]() ID is $99 and offers free updates for 18 months - paid update is $45 and is available once your 18 months expire, you just email the developer for a coupon code. ID also integrates Adobe lens correction profiles for your images. RPP does not offer any noise reduction built in (you will be surprised how little you actually need NR) - ID has high-quality noise reduction and several different sharpening algorithms built-in, including explicit Lucy-Richardson deconvolution. Both applications integrate with external editing applications of your choice and offer a wide variety of export options and scaling algorithms. If you need to make slideshows and publish your images to some website without leaving the comfort of your raw converter, these are not for you. These pieces of software are both, again in my opinion, superior to LR if all you are concerned with is getting a high-quality raw conversion without hidden adjustments being made to your data. RPP is free, but when you donate, you get an unlock code that gives you access to workflow helpers and a built-in profiling utility that permits you to shoot a color target (like a Color Checker or a QP card) and make custom profiles for your camera. RPP is a floating point converter that offers great control in the conversion, without adding a ton of secret sauce that you cannot see or control. ID is closer to a typical raw converter, in terms of the controls and features. They do not include all of the asset management features of LR, which I personally find useless. RPP and Iridient Developer are excellent raw converters. ![]()
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