![]() So, use Pixave to web capture those tuts and then use the ePub export to create a file to easily digest all of that goodness in iBooks, which I can view on my desktop or iPad Pro: I love the Etherington Brothers work and Lorenzo has this series of How to Think When You Draw series of mini tutorials. Here is an example of different ways that I use Pixave, web capture and ePub generation: Can't install Adobe Bridge on my iPad Pro, can't install Phase One's Media Pro on my iPad Pro either, but I can install and use Pixave, and they have plans to make an iPhone version as well. The professional apps are coming to the iPad at a blistering pace now and I needed a DAM to make life easier and also to be available and accessible with my iPad. I have Affinity Photo for iPad, and I hope to soon have Affinity Designer for iPad, I have Procreate, I love using Lumatouch's LumaFusion, just started to play with Clip Studio Paint for iPad. It all boils down to this for me with Pixave, having an iPad app that works seamlessly with the desktop app. Each one usually requires some type of workaround at some point. I have a lot of software but there isn't one app that is perfect. I know people want some magical combination of say Bridge and Lightroom, etc, but I just don't see that happening.Īlso, for me, it is a matter of finding something close enough, not perfect and making it work. Yeah, as I said to DianeF in that other thread, Pixave is NOT going to replace Lightroom. The files still exist in their original homes, and MB appears to point to those original homes. As far as I can tell, this is not an automatic process but must be done manually. I believe that what Pixave does is make copies of all the original photos on your hard drive according to the file structure that you set up on Pixave. Instead, Media Browser links to the original places where the image files are stored. I'm going to do an Internet search to see if there's a setting for this. When I went to Media Browser, I did not see any way to link it to Pixave, but that doesn't mean that it isn't possible. Unlike with Apple Photos, you can open more than one photo in Affinity Photo for the purpose of editing them. You just right click on a photo and then choose Open with Affinity Photo. It's come a long way in its latest versions from a few years ago. So far I like it except for the poorly written Help files. I bought Pixave today after playing with the trial version. I'm dreaming of something with the features of lightroom and the file compatibility of Pixave (Sans library) Kyno is an interesting alternative to bridge, I'd wager it is faster (Chokes a wee bit on raw files, but it is about 5 minutes old) but again it's going to be a bit insubstantial for a full on photography guy. The import is a little painful but once over and done with it's actually pretty damned fast, though my use case is more general DAM/organisation/file viewing rather than specifically photography. ![]() The tagging though drag´n drop looks nice, I´d like to see that in an Affinity DAM as well.Īs a file viewer it is actually pretty good, but lacking in some areas, you can't update real metadata or IPTC/XMP data, which is a little bit of a bummer. I highly doubt that it can be any faster than bridge (which again, is totally free), if anyone can prove this in video I´d like to know. Pixie 5mb download size also really makes me suspicious about the feature richness/ how their´re implemented. In the future you´ll get layered TIFF with embedded afphoto stream so every DAM or viewer like C1 or bridge will display full res afphoto files. (Maybe it´s great for afdesigner files though). I also don´t see what´s the big deal in browsing afphoto files, they´re huge and RAW development of many photos in a row is unusable so you won´t have many afphoto files per project anyway. (This happens frequently if you have to transfer photos from MB to iMac e.g., in C1 you can use Sessions and in bridge you can just copy the files) This double process makes it really hard to use as a fast image browser like bridge but it´s lack of pro features makes it also unusable as a DAM for a photographer (missing RAW development for anyone shooting more than a dozen fotos is the first no-go). As I´ve read in the MAS, Pixave does not recognize the pictures when you just put them into the folder in the finder, you have to import them so that pixaves data base recognizes them.
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