![]() ![]() Similar to C1 or Lightroom, it’s more than just a RAW converter in that it also has heavy-duty workflow features. ![]() For a long time it didn’t work with Leica RAW files, but this was corrected in June 2007 by the Mac OSX 10.4.10 update. A resource hog but many love it for it’s batch conversion and multi-image workflow features ( Ars Technica Review - Feb 2007). BTW according to Eric Hyman from Bibble (and contrary to net mythology), the actual RAW converter used in the app. Available in “lite” and “pro” versions, Leica DMR DNG support was only added from v4.9 onwards. ![]() A popular, high quality converter with built-in Noise Ninja noise reduction. FWIW some people love Silkypix, others think it’s not much better than Photoshop’s built-in ACR. More affordable than C1 and also available in a “free” (but advanced features disabled) version. A high quality converter which supports both the DMR and M8. ![]() The interface is a little clunky, there is no image editing (use Photoshop!) and the conversion speed is slow - but the images come out sharp and the colours are spot-on without any undue fiddling (this is the converter I currently use). A free RAW converter for Mac which creates very high quality images. C1 is pretty much the industry standard, but neither the “lite” or “pro” versions are cheap. By Phase One - the MF digital-back people - so they know what pro photographer’s want. So what are your better-quality RAW converter options, which also support Leica “DNG” RAW files?… Consequently this requires RAW conversion to make the images usable for editing, printing etc. JPEG is adequate for snap-shots, but you have to shoot RAW to extract the maximum quality from your digital images. ![]()
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