The B&W conversion is actually pretty nice if you don't mind not having control over color filters. It has nice exposure options set up in a way that they can be accessed quickly. It has the same raw importer that Aperture uses, which is good. On the other, the Aperture discontinuation caused me to look elsewhere and find Capture One, which is amazing and totally worth the $10/month. On the one hand, I was a happy Aperture user for 5-6 years and disappointed to see it go awy. Quickly looked at Aperture too - I´m not the die hard Aperture user anymore I once was, not that long ago - everything seems OK and fully functional there. So without a real intention of using it, already dropped it from The Dock. ![]() I probably need to look closer at it, but nothing from what I saw was anywhere near to what could be done in Aperture (not even close to iPhoto methinks), more or less expected. Did I like anything from what I saw? Not really, but of course, everything was unprocessed. What else to say? I looked quickly at it after importing one set of RAW pictures. I did the latter, after setting the preferences to not import into the library (so referenced), which triggers a huge warning about the pictures then not being accessible from iCloud. First thing happening was presenting both my Aperture library - the current one only, not all - and the (empty) iPhoto library as a choice to import from, or alternately create a brand new Photos library. Photos works, I went through the presentation then clicked to start now. Painless download and update of OSX, by the looks of it.
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