Friday 21 September 2012

ADOBE PHOTOSHOP LIGHTROOM 4 + SERIAL

Adobe's Lightroom is the tool of choice of pro and prosumer digital photographers who need a streamlined way to import, organize, and tweak, and output large numbers of high-resolution photo files. The app's newest version, Lightroom 4, adds several compelling new features—a built-in map locating where photos were shot, video tools, improved adjustments, integrated book creation, simple photo emailing, and soft proofing. These, along with a significant price cut from $299 to $149 make Lightroom a must-have app for anyone serious about digital photography. Let's take the new Lightroom out for a spin.Lightroom has a big, ever-present Import button and media auto-detect that launches the non-destructive importer. This lets you see thumbnails and full size images on memory cards even before importing. Lightroom 3.5's import is much faster than Aperture's, and both now let you start work on any photo in the set before all the import processing is done. ACDSee let me start processing while an import was still in progress, too, but it couldn't automatically apply adjustments aside from rotation on import, and it was much slower than Lightroom.Like Aperture, Lightroom imports pictures into its own database, aka "catalog," where other programs and the files system can't access to them (unless you change that option or export the pictures later). The database approach makes sense for photographers with huge collections of large images. Usually, you'll want to import photos as camera raw files, which offer more control over the final images. Lightroom supports raw conversion for every major DSLR and high-end digital camera.                         

                               
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