On Tue, Jan 12, 2010 at 2:23 PM, <mark@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Which Corel product are you using? I am old school too, but a good capture even back in the day was just the start. From altering developing times, print exposure times, filter packs, ect most of the same things we do in digital post processing were done back in the day too. It just the photographer didn't always do them their self.I have forgotten about Bibble, but the Thumbs plus looks promising too.-------- Original Message --------
Subject: RE: Digital Asset Management options
From: bobmcculloch@xxxxxxxxx
Date: Tue, January 12, 2010 12:50 pm
To: List for Photo/Imaging Educators - Professionals - Students
<photoforum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
I like Corel, lots of control, short learning curve, low price, free front end, but Im old school, shoot it right.
-----Original Message-----
From: mark@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, January 12, 2010 11:01 AM
To: List for Photo/Imaging Educators - Professionals - Students <photoforum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Digital Asset Management options
Ok on a side note from the Mac Pc debate, I am have a question. I run a
PC, and am looking at a trying to add a Digital asset management program
to go with Photoshop. That leaves out Aperture and I know Lightroom is
the PC choice of record. Trouble is right now I am major ticked off at
Adobe and would prefer to NOT buy anything from them if I don't have to.
(and I guess I don't but maybe future upgrades of Photoshop but that's
another story) I am getting by with Bridge right now, but are there
any other choices other than Lightroom that can do most of the same
types of things that isn't an Adobe product? Thanks for you help and
ideas. Maybe stuck, but figured it doesn't hurt to ask.
--
Please visit
bobmcculloch.myphotographer.com