About a year ago I purchased a 24″ iMac. I have been using Lightroom2 and PhotoshopCS4 Extended to process my images after I calibrated the monitor using an Eye-One sensor. I have had some trouble with prints being made by others including Mpix gallery wraps, the results were always too dark. A little sleuthing led me to many, many forum postings stating the brightness of the iMac display could not be reduced enough for accurate calibration. Aha! That is exactly the problem! My solution? I’m doing all photo processing on my MacBook Pro which calibrated beautifully.
I would love to see an app on the iPad which contains most of the functionality of Adobe Lightroom or Apple Aperture. I’m not needing to store a lot of images, I just want to be able to manipulate RAW images, save as jpegs, print them, download to a website, create a slide show, put them in documents, etc. It would also be great to be able to tether the iPad to your camera. Reviewing images on the iPad would be much easier than using the LCD. You could then just import the RAW images you want to work on to save memory. Now, does the iPad have a display with enough color depth to support this? I don’t know, but for quick and dirty edits it would be great.
I’ve been using the new Apple Magic Mouse with my iMac for several days now and really like the little rodent. I was concerned the shape would not be very ergonomic and my wrist would suffer. It’s been just the opposite. It is so much easier to use the Magic Mouse than the Mighty Mouse because I’m not always fighting to get the scroll ball movement to be recognized. The “clicking” feels more natural and there is no mistaking right vs. left clicking like I’ve had with the Mighty Mouse. The Magic Mouse also has a little more “heft” so it just feels more stable. Now for the negative – I haven’t been able to get it to pair with my Boot Camp WinXP.
A hint for those who have trouble getting the Magic Mouse to pair with their computer. Remove a battery from the Magic Mouse for a few seconds.
I did something last night I never dreamed I would be doing. Updating the software in two camera lenses! The Olympus EP-1 lenses contain software which helps with autofocus and other features and it needed to be updated. It was painless but it still felt strange to update software in a camera lens.