

- DXO PERSPECTIVE RELEASE NOTES MANUAL
- DXO PERSPECTIVE RELEASE NOTES UPGRADE
- DXO PERSPECTIVE RELEASE NOTES PRO
Lighting correction? Reduces contrast too much, for a much less interesting image. Lens sharpening? The DxO "after" seems way over sharpened to my eyes. I agree the real test is how these programs work on our images. The examples on their web site seem not only unpersuasive, but actually unattractive to me. I went to the link you provided and thought to myself: "Say what?!" Obviously, there is some difference between (1) and (2)-(3) as I used the defaults and they are somewhat different between ACR and DxO. I have just a sRGB monitor (NEC 2490WUXi2) and I can't see any difference between (2) and (3). Without turning on the gamut warning, could you actually see any differences between the three files ? That is, it is OK to use DxO for preliminary work on RAW files (lens corrections, color correction etc.) but if you do not want to truncate colors, you need to export to DNG and then convert DNG to TIFF using some other application (such as LR or PhotoShop) This probably means that internal (working) colorspace of DxO is much wider than AgobeRGB, but export to TIFF truncates it to AdobeRGB even when asking it to use ProPhoto. I can see Gamut Warning in (1) and (3), but not in (2).
DXO PERSPECTIVE RELEASE NOTES PRO
Converted it in DxO Pro 10 and exported it to DNG, after that opened that file in CS6.Converted it in DxO Pro 10 exporting to TIFF and asking to use ProPhoto.I experimented on a D800 raw, using ProPhoto everywhere and using AdobeRGB in "Proof Setup" It lets you see what colors are out of gamut. Photoshop CS6 has a "Gamut Warning" in View menu. I believe you would have to have a monitor that can produce the ProPhoto RGB color space to verify differences. One way to test: we can feed it a RAW of TIFF with colors outside the Adobe RGB range examine what DxO outputs compared to ACR set to ProPhotoRGB or maybe even DPP set to Wide Gamut RGB (I don't know if the latter works with TIFFs however). I saw in another reply you mentioning how much faster it is now in loading the program and loading folders, which was another problem I had with DXO as it has always been so slow to open and has to reload all of its profiles to each and every file, every time you go back to a folder. It seems like DXO is more designed for someone who is exposing to keep highlights far from the max and utilizing their higher-end noise reduction to control extra noise when raising shadows. It'd be interesting to know if the new program has improved to any extent in this area. There's a point at which DXO just cannot go any further that I can continue in ACR with zero clipped highlights, which is a big deal since I am exposing to the right all the time to maximize dynamic range and minimize shadow noise.
DXO PERSPECTIVE RELEASE NOTES MANUAL
I own the Elite version of DXO 9 and the times I have compared it to ACR, DXO is quite pathetic when it comes to highlight retention and recovery capability, and I've tried all the defaults and manual overrides to get the best result. If DxO ViewPoint 1 has at least the same features as those built-in into DxO Pro v9, this could be a solution.
DXO PERSPECTIVE RELEASE NOTES UPGRADE
Customers who do not already have a DxO ViewPoint license, and who own a DxO OpticsPro license for versions earlier than version 10, are entitled to a free DxO ViewPoint 1 license when they upgrade to version 10. It is now necessary to have the DxO ViewPoint plugin in order to use the perspective and volume deformation tools.

ViewPoint may have more tools/features than what OpticsPro up to v9 offered in terms of perspective corrections, but I'm sure they were sufficient for many (for me they were). It's not really about the 29€ (in my case) extra cost incurred in updating Elite v9 to v10 if you want to retain perspective corrections, but a matter of principle because there's no plausible reason why they would have had to do that other than to force users into another one (or maybe two, with the new "suite" also conveniently on offer) of their products (which will need to be updated in turn in due time).
