Showing posts with label Photosmith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photosmith. Show all posts

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Photosmith 2 enhances Lightroom-iPad integration

I’m delighted to see that Photosmith has released version 2, enabling multi-image tagging, bidirectional sync with Lightroom, native Eye-Fi support, and more.

According to their site, new features of the $20 app include:

Wirelessly sync your unsorted backlog from Lightroom with our free pluginSort and filter your photosOrganize them into collectionsApply star ratings and color labelsApply keywords and IPTC metadata individually, in groups, or with presetsShare highlights and rough selections to Facebook, Flickr or by e-mailSupport for RAW, JPG, or RAW+JPGSupport for 100% zoom for many camerasNative support for Export and Publish Services in Adobe LightroomDirectly receive from Eye-Fi cardsVery powerful sync options, allowing workflow customization

I can’t wait to try it out when I get home. If you’re using the app, what do you think of it?

Posted by John Nack at 3:19 PM on May 23, 2012

View the original article here

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Photosmith, the Lightroom iPad companion, is now available

I’m very pleased to see that after much anticipation, Photosmith for iPad has been released. I haven’t yet had a chance to try it, but initial reactions seem enthusiastic. Rob Galbraith writes,

We’ve had the pleasure of using Photosmith during its beta period and it has already joined our list of must-have photography apps for Apple’s tablet. If you use Lightroom and own an iPad, we strongly recommend checking out Photosmith.

Tangent: I’ll kick the tires once I find my tablet’s Camera Connection Kit, which is… somewhere.  Apple must surely recognize the frailty of such a solution, and I’m waiting for them to do to it what the iPad 2's Smart Cover did to the original’s recycled-mousepad of a cover: enable incredibly easy pairing & transfer between devices (e.g. cameras, phones, and tablets).  Hints about AirDrop in Lion make me hopeful.

Posted by John Nack at 3:59 PM on April 27, 2011

View the original article here