On 10/29/2014 01:15 PM, poma wrote:
On 28.10.2014 21:27, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 10/28/2014 06:58 AM, poma wrote:
On 27.10.2014 20:40, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 10/27/2014 12:13 PM, poma wrote:
On 27.10.2014 00:53, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 10/27/14 07:48, poma wrote:
You might try to contact the author
http://www.cybercom.net/~dcoffin/dcraw/
The first few sentences on that site would seem to answer all the questions....
"....My software is for processing those images *after* downloading them."
Touché.
poma
I'll probably contact the author as well. It fine to only support
processing after downloading, but it should still display the contents
of the files so that you can decide what to download to process.
regards,
Steve
Great, never underestimate the social moment.
poma
I've checked Rawtherapee and Darktable for their functionality.
Rawtherapee appears to not support importing photos from any source that
is not mounted, whereas Darktable will import photos from any detected
device and displays the contents of the photos on the camera when
prompting for which photos should be imported from the camera, which
presumably means that Darktable is not using dcraw the access the
camera, it is doing it itself.
http://www.darktable.org/2012/10/whats-involved-with-adding-support-for-new-cameras/
RAW format support
darktable uses two libraries to read RAW files. Most common RAW formats are read via the RawSpeed library (by Klaus Post), more esoteric RAW formats not supported by RawSpeed are read via LibRaw (which in turn is based on Dave Coffin's dcraw).
I've looked at the cameras.xml file linked to in the above web page and
it lists the D3100 which I assume means RawSpeed has support for my
camera, which would explain why Rawtable provides an on camera image
preview when importing the files.
BTW did you check with the Rawstudio
http://rawstudio.org
I haven't looked at this application as yet, mainly because until now I
didn't know it existed.
Perhaps the only real issue with the Nikon D3100 is the lack of USB Mass Storage mode.
Its not so much the lack of a USB Mass storage mode, its the lack of the
ability to preview the contents of the images on camera when I want to
copy the files to my network storage for processing in Photoshop
Elements, and, with some of them to produce a photo print. I only want
to copy the files I am going to keep, so I want the ability to view the
images, delete the ones I don't want to keep, then mass extract the
remaining files to my NAS. Hence for me the ability to mass preview the
images on camera is paramount, and any application that is used to
process the files needs to have the ability to do some rudimentary
correction to the raw file and save those corrections in a separate
"correction" file (the way the raw interface in the Photoshop
applications do) so that the actual raw file is left unchanged, so that
at the "corrections" file can be deleted at any time to back out the
changes without impacting the original raw file.
regards,
Steve
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