Fred Briggs
Senior Member
I was pleased to see the announcement of Adobe's DNG, as I have long believed that a neutral non-camera specific RAW file format is the most logical way forward for handling RAW files. I hope this format gets wide support from both camera and imaging software vendors.
However, I've just downloaded the new Adobe DNG format convertor and the latest version of Camera RAW which supports it, and had a brief play. As a result I'm now a bit puzzled about what Adobe intends by way of a workflow using this new format.
I expected the RAW convertor to offer to open the file into DNG format and do the RAW processing from there, maybe offering to save it in DNG format before leaving the ACR window. However, unless I am missing something, it seems that we have to use the standalone converter program to get the files into DNG format first. This seems to give no real incentive to use the DNG format.
I don't know if ACR has previously used separate convertor routines for each RAW type, or more likely a fairly generic conversion engine with different configurations for each RAW type. However, I would have thought that the logical thing to be doing now would be to replace all previous conversion routines with a standard DNG based ACR convertor engine used in conjunction with a pre-processor which converts each file to DNG according to the appropriate parameters dictated by its native RAW type.
If this is what is actually happening, then the data will be in DNG format prior to RAW conversion, so could automatically be saved in this neutral format on leaving the ACR window - maybe optionally according to a user set preference.
I would much prefer this as it would make the workflow a lot simpler and quicker, assuming that I want to use DNG, which I do.
Anyone got any more information on this?
Fred
However, I've just downloaded the new Adobe DNG format convertor and the latest version of Camera RAW which supports it, and had a brief play. As a result I'm now a bit puzzled about what Adobe intends by way of a workflow using this new format.
I expected the RAW convertor to offer to open the file into DNG format and do the RAW processing from there, maybe offering to save it in DNG format before leaving the ACR window. However, unless I am missing something, it seems that we have to use the standalone converter program to get the files into DNG format first. This seems to give no real incentive to use the DNG format.
I don't know if ACR has previously used separate convertor routines for each RAW type, or more likely a fairly generic conversion engine with different configurations for each RAW type. However, I would have thought that the logical thing to be doing now would be to replace all previous conversion routines with a standard DNG based ACR convertor engine used in conjunction with a pre-processor which converts each file to DNG according to the appropriate parameters dictated by its native RAW type.
If this is what is actually happening, then the data will be in DNG format prior to RAW conversion, so could automatically be saved in this neutral format on leaving the ACR window - maybe optionally according to a user set preference.
I would much prefer this as it would make the workflow a lot simpler and quicker, assuming that I want to use DNG, which I do.
Anyone got any more information on this?
Fred