Subject | Re: Any Minolta/Sony users using UFRaw and GIMP? |
From | sid |
Date | 04/08/2014 00:26 (04/07/2014 23:26) |
Message-ID | <1889530.nBcg46vEp2@thecrap.blueyonder.co.uk> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | rec.photo.digital |
Follows | nospam |
Followups | Alan Browne (7m) nospam (1h & 10m) > sid |
nospamSelected where? you must be running something to be able to see files to select. That's not some sort of file manager you are running is it? And what do you think happens when you tap the spacebar? It runs some viewing software, so that's 2 things you've run.
In article <1664657.oMNUckLgyt@thecrap.blueyonder.co.uk>, sid <sidney@sidshouse.net>wrote:nospamsidray carternospam
As I understand it, most all the open source software is based on dcraw - so they're going to have similar capabilities with different interfaces and some extensions.
and with similar limitations.
what limitations are these?
everything has limitations and dcraw is no different. among its limitations are it's speed, quality and supported cameras, as well as its user interface.nospamsidray carternospam
In the past, I've found dcraw useful to get a quick look at things by extracting the jpeg thumbnail (dcraw -e).
once again, more work than needed. on a mac, there's no need to run anything (especially using a command line). a simple tap of the space bar gives a quick look of nearly any file (photos, pdfs, spreadsheets, zip files and much more), which is why it's called quick look.
So how does quick look know which file you would like to see?
the ones you have selected. obviously.