Testseek.nl hebben 39 deskundige overzichten van Apple Aperture 3.0 verzameld en de gemiddelde classificatie is 83%. Scrol en zie neer alle overzichten voor Apple Aperture 3.0.
April 2010
(83%)
39 Reviews
Gemiddelde score van experts die dit product hebben beoordeeld.
Samenvatting: A great solution for keen photographers, Aperture 3 offers easy and fun tools for sorting, rating, tagging and fixing large image collections. The new features introduced to this latest version are significant enough to warrant an upgrade if you are a...
Was deze beoordeling nuttig?
-
Gepubliceerd: 2010-02-24, Auteur: Steve , beoordeeld door: macworld.co.uk
Vastly improved slideshows, impressive new brushes, multi-touch aware, ability to split and merge libraries, easy export to Flickr and Facebook
Sporadic reports of potential problems when upgrading older libraries, web page creation hasn’t been overhauled, need a powerful Mac and lots of RAM to run well
A lot has changed in this version of Aperture, so much in fact that it feels a little different, but it's all the better for it: improved RAW engine, updated sorting options, more powerful search features, much more versatile adjustments tools, among many...
Vastly improved slideshows; impressive new brushes; multitouch aware; ability to split and merge libraries; easy export to Flickr and Facebook
Sporadic reports of potential problems when upgrading older libraries; web page creation hasn’t been overhauled; need a powerful Mac and lots of RAM to run well
Samenvatting: Aperture 3 came out of nowhere. No warning, no pre-announcement, and no extended beta period as there was for version 2. You could almost think Apple was sneaking it out under the radar, unsure of its worth in the face of Adobe's continued onslaught wi...
The cumulative effect of Aperture 3’s new features, improved interface and simplified controls has opened the doors for another segment of photographers, namely those using iPhoto. At the same time, the addition of more sophisticated features such as b...
Excellent full-view mode with great added control; extremely useful brush adjustment tools for precise edits; handy preset Quick Fix modes with cool live preview; interfaces with third-party plug-ins from premium album companies; runs as a 64-bit application on Mac OSX Snow Leopard on Macs with Intel Core 2 Duo processors
Continuing bug issues including nagging program hang-ups; Faces and Places technology mostly a novelty; could use more HD editing capabilities for HD-DSLRs.
I'd be remiss if I didn't mention some of my own bug issues I experienced while testing Aperture 3.0.2 (and its last-minute upgrade to 3.0.3.), For the most part, the program ran extremely fast on the new 17-inch MacBook Pro featured in Objects of Desi...
Maskable edits for most adjustments, Multiple adjustment instances, Excellent metadata handling and embedding, Places and Faces features are smartly implemented, Better library and RAW/JPEG management, Curves adjustment with arbitrary points and custom vi
Still some graphics instability problems in version 3.0.3, Interface can still feel heavy, Edge masking needs more control, Verdict, So good that I'd put up with the crashing to use it
If you glanced at the new features in Aperture 3, it would seem easy to pass off the audio/video and Faces and Places features as gimmicky things for hobbyists, but the value of these features will grow on even for hardened studio nuts. Seeing the pow...
Simple, clean interface. Excellent photo-organization tools, including Places and Faces (geo-tagging). Excellent camera raw import. Brush-on adjustments with edge detection. Tethering.
Resource intensive. No history window to see previous actions. No geometry correction. No Windows version.
With face recognition for organizing people pictures, smart geo-tagging, a rich plug-in ecosystem, and all the adjustment and nondestructive versioning and organizational tools you find in Lightroom, Aperture is a serious contender for the pro photogra...