![]() ![]() ![]() One downside of v10 is the way they have messed around with integrating ViewPoint with DxO. This was a bearable price, not only because of the new features, but with the old DxO pricing model, if I wanted to upgrade to DxO v9 'Elite' edition from DxO v9 'Standard' edition to support any FF bodies I might need to use, the cost would have been much more than $69. However the 'Clearview' and PRIME features are now only available in the 'Elite' edition of DxO.įor me upgrade price to v10 from my old DxO Standard was only US $69, which also upgraded my DxO Viewpoint 2 to v2.5. The 'PRIME' NR speedup is also noticeable, but PRIME still refuses to make use of any GPU horsepower on your PC - it's all main CPU, and it still eats it up like crazy. The new 'Clearview' haze filter thing is quite nice and works very well for landscapes. There are various other changes worth looking into if you use DxO. This brings DxO in line with Lightrooom, Capture One and everyone else. What differentiates the editions is their support for various imaging features, not the type of camera you shoot. It's now 'Essential Edition' and 'Elite Edition', and both support all camera formats and the same camera equipment. One of the main changes is that the old distinction between DxO Optics Pro Elite (full-frame cameras) and Standard (APS-C, and everything else) no longer exists. Photo Software | Press release (PDF - 480k): DxO recently released DxO Optics Pro v10. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |