![]() StudioLink: the most seamless workflow ever conceived in a creative suiteįrom within Affinity Publisher, you can instantly access the advanced toolsets of Affinity Designer and Affinity Photo without ever leaving your layout thanks to the world-first StudioLink technology. It’s now being used by more than three million users (and counting!), delivering a next-level experience for photographers, designers, artists, architects, students, teachers, publishers, hobbyists and others looking for top tier creative software without sky-high subscription fees. Sounds like the 2 apps you use may not be a good candidate for me to consider.Since its inception, Affinity has gained the trust of professionals across the globe and picked up some of the industry’s most prestigious awards. Sounds like they are really not committed. Keep in mind that Affinity Photo is an all-round design tool, not just a photo editor. I think it was back in 2015 or 2016 there was rumble the product was in the works. Affinity Photo 2 at a glance: Price: 69.99 / £69.99. Affinity should just acquire a DAM, make the necessary tweaks and get it out to the users. Reviving a robust software with a good reputation could be a good solution for them too if, despite the statements, they haven't been able (or didn't have resources) to develop one from scratch in at least 5 years or more. ![]() Since Phase One discontinued Media Pro a few years ago, my most cherished dream would be that Serif buys it up improving it only where needed, replacing Quick Time functions with a solid integration with Affinity's features and a full support to their proprietary file types. ![]() Having to rely on multi-layered Tiffs is the only workaround (only for pictures) at the moment, but at the expense of a huge waste of disk space. Media Pro could be configured to accept new file types but being limited to 4 digit extensions prevents Affinity's files to be imported. I've been using Phase One Media Pro (formerly Microsoft Expression Media and iView Media Pro) for the last 12 years and I'm still pretty happy with it. The lack of a DAM able to manage properly Affinity's file(s) (beyond the simple thumbnail preview) is frustrating. It can occasionally be a little nerdy, but it is a database at heart so what would you expect? But it is a wonderful standalone catalogue and bears looking at. It's not free (other than the size-limited "Lite" version) and it has no raw development or editing capabilities to speak of. In other words, I can choose an Affinity Photo file inside of Photo Supreme, click on a button, and open that photo directly into Affinity for further editing. You can select any photo and (i) locate them on your disk or (ii) open them in an application of your choosing. afphoto"), it will be able to include AP's files in its catalogues, using the embedded JPG previews for its thumbnails. If you tell the application about Affinity Photo's extension (". Searching is fairly easy, although it can be crazy complex if you need it to be. It supports rating, geo-location, albums and portfolios (including "smart" albums), versions and stacks, full metadata editing with creation of custom metadata, and so forth. Photo Supreme is a catalogue (not a photo browser) with probably the best keyword assignment process I've ever come across. ![]() ![]() There is also a "Photo Supreme Lite" version, which is free (without any limitations other than a 5,000 photo limit) - an excellent way to evaluate the product. ( Link: )It is available for Mac and Windows, in Single User and Server configurations. Good morning, If you're looking for a full-featured DAM, try out Photo Supreme. The changes in Affinity Photo 2 for Windows 2.0.4 (those made since the last release Affinity Photo 2 for Windows 2.0.3) are as follows: Fixes & Improvements: (since the last release 2.0.3) Develop Persona: Enabling White Balance on non RAW files crashes Affinity Photo or was not functioning correctly. ![]()
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