You can change it while in the develop module using the "Assistant Options" icon/menu.Īnother thing to note: I believe that that old version of Photoshop (CS2? CS3?) was 32-bit-only, which means that it won't run under macOS 10.15 (Catalina) or 11 (Big Sur) – which also means that it won't run on M1-based Macs.Īdobe released source code for an even older version of Photoshop (the original one, which ran on black-and-white 68K-based Macs).
Bridge works too but since you won't use Adobe stuff that's out unless free is OKĪffinity Photo supports both their own Serif Raw converter (which uses libraw?) as well as Apple Raw. You might want to consider having something like that around for getting to your images instead of trying to use Workspace that's one area where I find it weak but YMMV. I use Bridge for quick viewing and finding ORFs on macOS, or Fast Raw Viewer. So Apple things like QuickLook and Preview won't work for quick viewing of the ORF files. I rather doubt Apple is ever going to support that camera.
Point being check the software you buy since it won't be able to rely on Apple's support for it. I think Topaz uses libraw so that should work. I think Affinity uses its own raw conversion (libraw?), but I can't recall. Note that Apple Raw still does not support your E-M1iii. Someone may have already noted this, but I don't want to wander through all the meanderings in this thread re piracy and such. Just need a good "Photoshop Like" editor that wont break the bank. I shoot Olympus and use the OEM software to convert from RAW to 16-bit TIFF as a first step in my processing sequence. I would have already bought it but my Mac Mini won't be here for another week. But people remember them, and also, the wait for a ClarisWorks replacement, and the wait for Final Cut X (a code rewrite) to catch up with the final version of Final Cut Pro. Note that only a few of the applications that went away (Alice, iDVD, Aperture) were not eventually superseded by other Apple or third-party programs.
I corrected misinformation in a post – the claim that full Adobe Photoshop (not a time-limited trial) is "free" to the public, and the incorrect implication that if someone who is not a "computer geek" can install it, that must imply that that copy is legal.