If it works on the laptop & not on the desktop, the only thing I can
think of is to bring the laptop home long enough to set it down next to
the desktop and go through the parameters, settings & preferences side
by side to see what the difference is.

On 1/21/2014 10:10 AM, Mark Roberts wrote:
Stanley Halpin wrote:

Random thoughts, provided in the total absence of actual knowledge
go the Photoshop HDR process:

a) could the problem be with the source images rather than with the
process? E.g., are you giving it three overexposed images rather
than three bracketed exposures? Do you get the same results from
this set of inputs if you use another program? [Free download a
trial copy of Photomatix or something like that.]

b) could the process parameters be improperly set? E.g., maybe you
are feeding three images but the parameters are set to process only
one imageā€¦

Nope. The same images and settings process perfectly on my laptop.

One complicating issue is that I use the Merge to HDR feature quite
infrequently, so I can't guess what changes I might have made (if
any) that would cause this behavior. I think it's been a long time
since I last used it.

The traditional scapegoat of Windows updates can't be blamed as both
my laptop and desktop are equally updated.

I can't find anyone else with the same problem on either the
official Adobe forum or the NAPP web site, though I have read up on
dozens of other Merge to HDR problems in hope of learning what
approaches might be worth tying. (I have learned that my video card
swap was pointless as an official Adobe revealed that the graphics
processor isn't used in HDR processing.)



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