Engadget reported today about this neat little gps device. There are various tools available the connect to the camera and tag your images with coordinates using gps.
The way we understand this neat little gadget however is that you carry it with you and it records where you are at what time. It then matches this to the times on the images you took and tags them with the correct location coordinates.
We don’t have a lot of details but it’s coming out next year and look pretty interesting.
Optics Pro, is a popular photographers worflow tool from DXO Labs that allows you to batch edit images. It’s receiving a lot of anger due to the anti piracy methods, or DRM (digital rights management) they have used in the latest Version 5 of the software.
The idea of these systems is to prevent people from stealing the software by downloading it for free online. Companies vainly think they can prevent this activity by adding intensive licensing systems. The reality is that it simply does not work! Hackers crack the DRM, and then make the cracked software available free. Yep that’s right! We could go out and download free copies of most of the major software we buy, and often the anooying DRM will have been removed thereby making it more enjoyable to use. Yet companies like DXO still don’t get it. They choose to distrust the customers who do want to support them and make the user experience of their product a bad one. The afore mentioned hacking, and stealing of software is of course not legal, and I am a believer that when a developer makes software he should get something for his time, so I do not condone pirating software, but something does need to be done.
It seems that DXO Labs has used a very invasive DRM on this version that can cause all sorts of problems. Pace the company who develops the DRM even tells us in it’s own FAQ of a myriad of problems that can be caused if their system decides you might be a pirate. There’s a good Forum thread over on DPReview where people are talking intensively about this problem, and the problems that Pace Interlock DRM can cause. It seems that along with all the irritation the system, it can actually cause damage to your computer system as well.
On a lighter note DRM however has gotten invasive that the consumer tolerance for it is low, This is a prefect example and DXO is paying for having missed the consumer satisfaction boat in such a big way. For many users of Optics Pro, the solution is to simply not buy it anymore.
Hopefully because of consumer outrage like this DRM will gradually fade away, just as it is staring to do in the entertainment industry. Will DXO be around to see it? That is not yet certain. We have offered to allow them to comment, and if they do we’ll let you know what they intend to do about this problem. If they were smart they would probably apologize to all these paying customers, and stop messing up their product with DRM. That however remains to be seen.
Lastly, our recommendation to those in the DRM bussiness is to start planning for a new job. To companies that use the systems like DXO, Adobe, and many others. We say we’re tired of this and you better get rid of it.
I just launched a huge Lightroom presets collection over at seimeffects.com. The set has over 50 cool presets in, covering everything in the workflow process from corrections to sassy creative color effects in a very broad variety.
If your looking for a good set of creative presets then check out power workflow presets. This set has been months in the making and has some killer effects. If you like Lightroom you’ll like Power Workflow, and there’s also a video over there that shows them in action. Check it out.
Update… The issue we were having with the site seem to be resolved. All links should work now. If you have further problems feel free to contact.
It’s a BROADCAST everyone. For the past year or so tech guru’s have been debating about what to call these internet shows that we produce. Podcast is a pretty bad name because it infers that the program is related directly to ipods, and it’s also an unknown word for many.
Scenario of you talking to a friend. (note that this a a simulation and people (especially girls) may still think your nerdy and uncool, even though you do a broadcast)
Yes I’m pretty in to technology. I also do a podcast about it. What Friend is Thinking… What the heck is a podcast??? must be some little group of friends that he talks to.
Maybe this would be better.
Yes I’m in to technology, and I also do a weekly broadcast about it. What friend is thinking… Cool this guy must be on his toes and have something going.
MONTEREY, Calif.–Adobe Systems has committed to shipping a beta version of its online image-editing tool, Photoshop Express, this year, and said it will be complete in 2008.
“By late this year, we anticipate having a beta version,” said John Loiacono, senior vice president for Adobe Creative Solutions, speaking at the 6sight digital imaging conference here. And next year, the online service will be “available to anyone,” he said.
Loiacono showed Photoshop Express running on an Adobe server connected over the Internet, he said. But when the average person experiences the software, it likely will be through partners such as Shutterfly or Photobucket, he said.
Unsurprisingly, Loiacono left unmentioned Flickr, which said in October it will use Picnik’s online photo-editing tools.
Photoshop Express is a profoundly important project, and Adobe’s schedule indicates that its repercussions are near-term and not academic.
For Adobe, the project is the spearhead of a transformation from a seller of boxed software to a provider of services in an increasingly rich Internet experience. And for the industry overall, it signals that Internet technology is maturing enough that companies are willing risk extending the brand of respected PC software to the network.
Photoshop Express, as its name suggests, isn’t a full-fledged version of Photoshop proper or even of its hobbyist-oriented sibling, Photoshop Elements. The intent is to reach a much larger audience than the company currently reaches with its higher-end boxed software products.