On 30.10.2014 21:58, Stephen Morris wrote:
> On 10/29/2014 01:15 PM, poma wrote:
>> On 28.10.2014 21:27, Stephen Morris wrote:
>>> On 10/28/2014 06:58 AM, poma wrote:
>>>> On 27.10.2014 20:40, Stephen Morris wrote:
>>>>> On 10/27/2014 12:13 PM, poma wrote:
>>>>>> On 27.10.2014 00:53, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>>>>>> On 10/27/14 07:48, poma wrote:
>>>>>>>> You might try to contact the author
>>>>>>>> http://www.cybercom.net/~dcoffin/dcraw/
>>>>>>> The first few sentences on that site would seem to answer all the 
>>>>>>> questions....
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> "....My software is for processing those images *after* downloading 
>>>>>>> them."
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> Touché.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> poma
>>>>> I'll probably contact the author as well. It fine to only support
>>>>> processing after downloading, but it should still display the contents
>>>>> of the files so that you can decide what to download to process.
>>>>>
>>>>> regards,
>>>>> Steve
>>>>>
>>>> Great, never underestimate the social moment.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> poma
>>>>
>>> I've checked Rawtherapee and Darktable for their functionality.
>>> Rawtherapee appears to not support importing photos from any source that
>>> is not mounted, whereas Darktable will import photos from any detected
>>> device and displays the contents of the photos on the camera when
>>> prompting for which photos should be imported from the camera, which
>>> presumably means that Darktable is not using dcraw the access the
>>> camera, it is doing it itself.
>>>
>> http://www.darktable.org/2012/10/whats-involved-with-adding-support-for-new-cameras/
>>    RAW format support
>>    darktable uses two libraries to read RAW files. Most common RAW formats 
>> are read via the RawSpeed library (by Klaus Post), more esoteric RAW formats 
>> not supported by RawSpeed are read via LibRaw (which in turn is based on 
>> Dave Coffin's dcraw).
> 
> I've looked at the cameras.xml file linked to in the above web page and 
> it lists the D3100 which I assume means RawSpeed has support for my 
> camera, which would explain why Rawtable provides an on camera image 
> preview when importing the files.
>>
>> BTW did you check with the Rawstudio
>> http://rawstudio.org
> 
> I haven't looked at this application as yet, mainly because until now I 
> didn't know it existed.
>>
>> Perhaps the only real issue with the Nikon D3100 is the lack of USB Mass 
>> Storage mode.
> 
> Its not so much the lack of a USB Mass storage mode, its the lack of the 
> ability to preview the contents of the images on camera when I want to 
> copy the files to my network storage for processing in Photoshop 
> Elements, and, with some of them to produce a photo print. I only want 
> to copy the files I am going to keep, so I want the ability to view the 
> images, delete the ones I don't want to keep, then mass extract the 
> remaining files to my NAS. Hence for me the ability to mass preview the 
> images on camera is paramount, and any application that is used to 
> process the files needs to have the ability to do some rudimentary 
> correction to the raw file and save those corrections in a separate 
> "correction" file (the way the raw interface in the Photoshop 
> applications do) so that the actual raw file is left unchanged, so that 
> at the "corrections" file can be deleted at any time to back out the 
> changes without impacting the original raw file.
> 
> regards,
> Steve
> 

In your case is just perhaps crucial.
Shall we start a thread again? :)
ptp != usb_storage


poma


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