Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-04 Thread Bruce Williams
Same here. I did my own test, but going from 6400 ISO down to 200 ISO. I also used 2 exposure modules (1 @ +3, and 1 @ +2) and found the images to be almost indistinguishable from each other. If anything, the noise distribution was subtly different in it's randomisation. As for white balance differ

Re: Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread Mark Feit
On 3/2/19 5:37 AM, Bruce Williams wrote: Yeah, but the numb nuts said "darktable could only give +3 stops of exposure". Clearly, they did not know about the ability to instigate a second instead of a module. As cameras continue to see better in the dark, I wonder if it would be worth conside

Re: Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread Patrick Shanahan
* Moritz Mœller [03-02-19 15:59]: > And how are you representative as a user? What's the relevance of your > experience in the context of what I said? > > I have no problem with DT's UI but I'm a professional VFX artist and > software engineer. My DT UX is zero representative for this reason and

Re: Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread Moritz Mœller
And how are you representative as a user? What's the relevance of your experience in the context of what I said? I have no problem with DT's UI but I'm a professional VFX artist and software engineer. My DT UX is zero representative for this reason and for the most obvious one: I'm just a sing

Re: Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread Per Inge Oestmoen
Patrick Shanahan wrote: fwiw: all software has it's own ideal about what a user expects one can seldom move from one application to another similar w/o having to learn the new UI. NONE is standard. I tend to agree with this. However, precisely because all are different good documentation is

Re: Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread Patrick Shanahan
* Jason Polak [03-02-19 11:03]: > Going to have to disagree with that, and I think at least some of it is > what you used first. I actually tried darktable before Lightroom and > just by clicking around I found darktable pretty intuitive. Trying to do > the same in Lightroom was confusing after th

Re: Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread Jason Polak
Going to have to disagree with that, and I think at least some of it is what you used first. I actually tried darktable before Lightroom and just by clicking around I found darktable pretty intuitive. Trying to do the same in Lightroom was confusing after that. Jason On 2/3/19 9:19 am, Moritz Mœl

Re: Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread Moritz Mœller
I'm not surprised by the comment. DT's UI isn't intuitive. If you are a person that learns a software by using it/trial & error instead of reading the manual, your experience will be pretty unfavorable. I haven't watched the video but from the comments here it seens it's about features, not UX

Re: Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread KOVÁCS István
In the comments, they do mention using another instance of exposure. However, since they gave darktable a total of 20 minutes (and did not ask someone who has actually used it), they may have forgotten about base curves, which also influence brightness. --- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAb85TukS

Re: Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread Bernhard
even more easy than that: right click and enter value manually ... :-) -- regards Bernhard https://www.bilddateien.de Bruce Williams schrieb am 02.03.19 um 11:37: Yeah, but the numb nuts said "darktable could only give +3 stops of exposure". Clearly, they did not know about the ability to ins

Fwd: [darktable-dev] Pushing ISO (ISO invarience)

2019-03-02 Thread Bruce Williams
Yeah, but the numb nuts said "darktable could only give +3 stops of exposure". Clearly, they did not know about the ability to instigate a second instead of a module. I wouldn't lose any sleep over it. Cheers, Bruce Williams. -- Forwarded message - From: Andreas Schneider Date: S