I also saw some blog post that showed how VSCO gives very different results for files from different cameras, which does not seem to be the case with Replichrome. I was looking at VSCO too, but I chose Replichrome over it, because it seems to be more faithful to the original film - and as a result, it's gives a less stylized, more realistic look than VSCO. If I were to get only one I would definitely pick the first pack. I have all three packs, but I mostly use the first two. Lastly, and totally off topic, what do you think of the Replichrome presets? What I tend to do is select a slider with my finger on the touch screen, and then use the arrow keys to adjust. I find I don't get enough precision controlling the sliders with the pen. Is the pen a nice way to edit the photos with the slider or is the trackpad the ideal way to go? I currently use a Nikon D5100 and edit RAW files. My uneducated guess would be that more RAM would only help marginally, and that a faster processor is what's needed - but I could be wrong.ĭo you mind if I ask what you shoot with? I really couldn't say - I don't know enough about what the bottleneck is. I haven't had the chance to calibrate it yet, as I'm abroad and my Spyder is at home, so I can't say how far off calibration it is, but there's not obvious problem in that dimension.ĭo you think if you had of upgraded the ram to 16gb but stayed with the i5 you would be okay, or is the Intel Iris graphics really the difference maker in combination with the i7? Oh, and the screen really looks great - extremely sharp and clear for photo work. For LR use, the only thing I miss is a little more speed, but then you get what you pay for. My main use for it is for office-type work (writing, coding, web, reading), and for that I really couldn't be happier. Overall, I'm extremely happy with my SP4. The pen is also nice for local adjustments, although again I think a faster computer is needed to make the experience completely frustration-free. I can then scroll the preset list under the mouse pointer by swiping, so that looking at previews of different presets is extremely fast. A nice thing I've discovered is that if I place my mouse pointer over a preset, the small preview window shows the effect of that preset. The touch is also great for scrolling through and trying out presets (I use the Replichrome presets a lot). When sorting through new photos, I can go fullscreen and swipe horizontally to switch between photos, while swiping up sets the keep flag and swiping down sets the reject flag. I really like the touch screen, and LR has a good interface for it. So if LR would be an important reason for getting the Surface, I thing you should go for the i7, or perhaps even the Surface Book. I'd also say that I wish that LR would run a little bit faster on the Surface (I have the 256 GB/i5 version).
#Lightroom 6.2 issues driver#
Sure! I'm still having some problems with GPU acceleration (it worked for a little while, then the graphics driver crashed). Please direct non-lightroom topics to the most appropriate of the following!
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