They are very good though, but I wish the company had provided these as standard. The advantage though is that these will work on all cameras, and not just those from Fujifilm. They do have support for matching Fuji’s Film Simulation modes, but this needs the companion application DXO Film Pack (a new version of which was also launched today) in order to get access to these. While it is a bit of a roundabout way of working, the results are impressive.īut there’s more bad news. This is kind of like how “Enhance” works in Lightroom, or X-Transformer. Alternatively, if you would prefer to see the better quality conversion, you can export it as a DNG file with just the optical corrections and demosiacing and noise reduction applied, and this will give you an editable DNG file which still retains the ability to work with it as if it was a RAW file. You can work with your images as normal, and then when you’re ready to export, export your image as a Tiff or Jpeg with Deep Prime enabled. In order to get the best results you need to use Deep Prime. But there are a few caveats, which brings us to the bad. It is capable of some of the best conversions that I have seen, and I’ve tried and tested a lot of options. So, I’ve been trying this out for a couple of weeks, and when it comes to Fujifilm support, I have both good and bad news!įirst of all, the good: It does a really good job. ![]() We can't wait to hear what they think."įuji photographers are welcome to submit their feedback and comments via the following website: End of press release Initial Impressions of Fuji Film Support To this end, we have created a website specifically dedicated to collecting their feedback. "Our goal is to offer them the best solution available in terms of image quality. "We are very happy to finally open our doors to the community of Fujifilm photographers," said Jean- Marc Alexia, VP Product Strategy. Created through the exclusive DxO Labs calibration process, these modules automatically remove optical defects such as distortion, chromatic aberrations, vignetting, and lack of sharpness. In addition, 605 new DxO modules have been made available. From the recent X-E4, X-S10, X-T4, and X100V through to the older X-E2 and X-70, no fewer than 18 Fujifilm cameras are now supported. Support for Fujifilm X-Trans sensors (Beta)įor the first time ever, DxO PhotoLab 5 now supports Fujifilm X-Trans sensor cameras. These improvements are available to everyone and are up to 4 times faster for Apple Silicon Mac users and 1.5 times faster on the best Windows architectures. The deep-learning approach of DxO PhotoLab 5 and DeepPRIME in particular has been significantly optimised in terms of reactivity as well as processing and export times. With deep learning, DeepPRIME takes a holistic approach that combines the two steps into one. Traditionally, these two operations have been carried out separately, each introducing flaws that adversely affect the quality of the other. It drastically improves digital noise reduction while ensuring more efficient demosaicing. ![]() Trained by deep learning methods using millions of images analysed in DxO laboratories over the past 20 years, DxO DeepPRIME technology uses artificial intelligence to develop RAW files. DeepPRIME: more efficient and up to 4 times faster In addition, this new version optimises the software's photo library management tools by reorganising them. It also includes advanced means of keyword prioritisation via an interactive tree structure. ![]() PhotoLab 5 now processes IPTC and EXIF data and third-party application synchronisations. A PhotoLibrary packed with metadata and keyword management features
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