It can’t have been easy over the past little while, as I am all too aware of myself, so a big shout out for getting a new version out. It’s been a challenging time for small independent developers, and I hope people continue to support Brian and co. Sony: A7 IV, A7R IVA, A7R IIIA, ZV-E10 and ILME-FX3.Iridient Developer was also updated with new camera support including: 5 adjustment levels (up from 3) for sharpening and noise reduction adjustments, plus elimination of the “default” option that mostly caused confusion.įor more details visit the Iridient Digital website.Improved luminance and color noise reduction algorithms.New option to automatically taper sharpening strength based on image ISO.New Sharpening Masking adjustment to allow for more selective sharpening of edge and detailed areas. I downloaded a trial of the Iridient Developer application to do a quick, non scientific comparison of this RAW Processor compared to Adobe Lightroom which is my normal workflow for Fuji X-T2 RAW processing.A new preferences dialog for the Lightroom plug-in that allows for customization of the file name suffix/prefix and sub-folder when using the plug-in.The ability to save settings presets to file.Support for X-E4, GFX 50S II, GFX 100S and X-T30 II. 30-50% faster processing for most operations on the M1 family of Macs.Here’s a rundown of what’s in the new version: Luckily my fears were unnecessary, and there is now a new version (Version 2.01) which brings support for all of the recent Fujifilm cameras as well as native Apple silicon compatibility. Some users had also written to me expressing their concern. It’s been quite a while since we got an update to Iridient X-Transformer, and I was beginning to get a bit worried about the future of the software.
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