![]() Get the photo you’re looking for, even if you don’t own the equipment. We’re excited to bring the powerful photo editing tools once only used by professionals to even more people now. Įxplore the look and feel of classic cameras, films, and lenses. If you purchased the Nik Collection in 2016, you will receive a full refund, which we’ll automatically issue back to you in the coming days. ![]() Starting March 24, 2016, the latest Nik Collection will be freely available to download: Analog Efex Pro, Color Efex Pro, Silver Efex Pro, Viveza, HDR Efex Pro, Sharpener Pro and Dfine. The Nik Collection is comprised of seven desktop plug-ins that provide a powerful range of photo editing capabilities - from filter applications that improve color correction, to retouching and creative effects, to image sharpening that brings out all the hidden details, to the ability to make adjustments to the color and tonality of images. As we continue to focus our long-term investments in building incredible photo editing tools for mobile, including Google Photos and Snapseed, we’ve decided to make the Nik Collection desktop suite available for free, so that now anyone can use it. Photo enthusiasts all over the world use the Nik Collection to get the best out of their images every day. Maybe ACDSee Ultimate 10 will fill in those gaps and we then will be able to completely retire those external editors.Today we’re making the Nik Collection available to everyone, for free. But unfortunately there's still some "heavy-lifting" editing that can only be done in an external editor like PhotoLine or Photoshop. With actions and adjustment layers, Ultimate 9 has strengthened the edit function of ACDSee tremendously. I'm sure it's because very few of their customers use PhotoLine. I have corresponded with ACDSee support about PLD thumbnails several times, but there is no interest in providing proper support for PLD files. Their mostly-European customer base doesn't seem to care. The mess with PLD thumbnails could be solved if PhotoLine would adopt the Microsoft standard, but the brothers who design and support the program don't want to pay Microsoft royalty fees, according to postings on the PhotoLine forum. Recently the publishers of PhotoLine apparently altered the code, making the FastPictureViewer patch inoperable. That enabled Windows Explorer to create thumbnails for the PLD file format (but not ACDSee). I prefer the generic PLD icon so that I can find the file faster.Ī few years ago FastPictureViewer added thumbnail support for PLD files to its separately-sold codec. With the suggested "decode" option selected, ACDSee finds the internal PLD JPG, creates a thumbnail, then labels the file-type "JPG." When you're looking at many thumbnails, a mislabeled thumbnail is not very practical even though the file can be run in PhotoLine from Ultimate 9. Did you activate the plugin-settings? If there really is no thumbnail for PLDs anymore, that would be a big drawback for me.Įdit: I installed the English demo and you still get a thumbnail from PLDs, it you have activated "Try to decode files that do not have recognized image extensions" in the Plug-in Settings.I use the setting that places the file-type on the thumbnail created by ACDSee.
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