Halftone,
I don't know where to begin to tell you how wrong you are.
Clearly you do :-)
How many people do I know, and I've been around a long time, that run the task bar at the top of my screen? ZERO!
You need to get out more. The default position was widely criticised from before the launch of XP. Many who realise it can be moved park it at the top because it's then like a normal drop down menu, close to application menus. Some weirdos even run with at the side so it can be parked on a second monitor. But regardless of deviant personal preference, it's just standard Win app good manners to respect the taskbar position. Apps are not supposed to obscure or hide under it, and the vast majority do not.
In case you missed it, I'm saying QUI finally improves a lot of UI aspects that have dogged QI for years. It's just a small shame that this one persists.
This one is a beaut!
There is no ground up recode, my friend. The printing algorithms are still there and the best, and everything ekse has been improved, PLUS, NEW innovations, such as Lighning Raw, and Tone Targeted Sharpening.; just to name two.
MC says it's a brand new prog! Now you're telling me it's a makeover with some added stuff. Whichever, I agree it's better.
My point was however that for anyone who bought QI for its unrivalled printing abilities, which has been its whole USP, the new version offers very little beyond a better, tidier UI. Is that really worth $89?
I'm not getting into a debate about Adobe here. That company drives me up the wall. Unfortunately Photoshop remains like death and taxes. Your homily about womens' shopping seems to assume I love paying Adobe upgrade costs because there's a discount. You are hallucinating.
The fact is that QI is not Adobe, is not in a position of market domination except in the niche area of printing. It's just my opinion, nothing more, that it is ill-advised to hang QI's hat on RAW processing and that the user base will follow. Some will, and that's fine. But those who want to print, and only print, won't find any significant advantage in upgrading, and may feel slightly miffed that the choice is between the legacy versions which will remain static and deprecated, and a new version which has to be purchased all over again for no other benefit except that it will continue to be developed.
This obviously does not apply to people like you, who clearly want, like and use the Raw processing, and I can see that you would consider it a bargain. The question is : how many of you are there? Raw is very much a minority pursuit and printing isn't.
Did you complain to Adobe?
Since you ask, oh yes. I think they're exploitative and deeply unimpressive. See
http://tonysleep.co.uk/blog/photoshop-cs2-on-ebayLexus started late from the back of a very big pack of luxury cars, and they don't seem to be suffering.
It is the quality of the product plus the value for the dollar spent.
Qimage, has been and always will be the best value for the dollar on the planet, whether you print only or use it as a full blown editor as I do, it still remains the best value.
Quality! Let's compare...
http://www.ddisoftware.com/qimage/quality/raw.htmQuality seems to matter less than hype in photography! If you've used 'em, ACR and LR are decent but not the best RAW converters, though they are slowly improving. What they have going for them is a gigantic marketing snowball, not ultimate quality. People just assume they must be good but there are several RAW converters that IME can do a much better job. There is always a downside too, whether it's usability, or pernicious upgrade costs (says a sometime Capture One user). There's always a balance of attributes which is quite personal to the individual and how they work, and that alone stops any single prog achieving dominance. I only wish Photoshop had such vibrant opposition.
On the basis of a try-out, I'd rate QIU Raw processing as capable of very good quality but... if I have 100 RAW photos to process before bedtime I am not going to use QIU. "Refine" is clever and a better tool than the equivalent methods in many other RP's, but anything that needs filters is a world of workflow pain. It's not for no reason that the more usable RC's have evolved background batch processing rather than applying every tweak in real time.
I am not rubbishing QIU RP here, simply saying it has a balance of attributes that don't suit me.
You only have to have eyes to see the work and quality that goes into making a product like Qimage Ultimate.
Everday, more and more Qimage users that bought for printing only, have been trying out the Raw Processing, and the Tone Targeted Sharpening, and more to come in a steady stream. They are realizing that the *results* they are getting surpass the hyped up ACR and the LR results.
Every LR user I have ever spoken to says, I love LR. It stores my images the way I like, but it *still* can't print worth a damn.
That says that Adobe knows it is a terrible printing program, but it still hasn't been addressed.
But you still buy it, and you spat on Qimage. Tsk Tsk!
I really cannot imagine why you think that I like or bought LR, or that I spit on QI. Neither are true. I dislike LR a lot. It strikes me as far too clever for its own good, and the Prodig list is daily awash with real and imagined problems with LR catalogues, LR and PS CM issues. No thanks. And I think I made it very clear that I regard QI as without peer as far as printing goes. FGS man, I
like QI, have been using it for years and recommending it. At least half a dozen people have bought it because I've told them they're idiots to try printing photos any other way.
All that I am expressing here is personal bewilderment about the strategic thinking behind QIU. Attempting to ride two horses at once usually is a bad idea. The printing model is a compromised workflow unless you just want to process selected Raw and go straight to print. If that's what you want, ideal.
If you have a problem with any other software, you wait until next year and pay for the fix in an upgrade, or at least wait another 6 months for a free one.
I know people that call Tech Support on their credit card billed at so many $ per half hour for help.
Mr. Chaney is here every day, listening to what people want and need, and putting out new versions at no charge as often as 3 times a week.
Sadly perhaps, that is the lot of the small software company. They don't have the market power to twist users' arms like the majors do.
Along with QI, I am a long term fan and user of iMatch and Vuescan. Both are also produced by solo authors with the same dedication to endless revision and improvement. Each has succeeded in producing niche software that is best in class. Mario (iMatch) charges for major upgrades, whilst Ed doesn't charge at all for VS upgrades. Both, like Mike Chaney, are sort-of legends among the photo community, their marketing is done by word of mouth - user loyalty and appreciation that has been earned by their unconditional support of what they sell. But if either suddenly decided to deprecate their existing products in favour of new versions that incorporated features few wanted yet had to be bought all over again, I'm not sure they'd be quite as popular.
Interestingly iMatch has basic Raw processing built in. VS has had pretty good Raw processing in it for years. But they don't sell themselves as RP's and nobody buys them for that, they buy then because they are *the* DAM prog, "the" scanning prog. QI is *the* printing prog. There are at least 20-25 Raw processors to choose from, and some are extremely good, with dedicated user bases. QI as also *the* RP, is a much tougher sell.
Have you ever heard the expression: "Shooting yourself in the foot" or "Cutting off your nose to spite your face"?
I think you've read what I didn't write and ended up arguing with what I didn't say. For clarity : QIU is better, nicer to use for its core purpose. This is good. But the improvements are quite small, and have no great impact on print quality which was already the best there is.
I am just - and this is only my personal opinion - perplexed at the discontinuity between old QI and new QI, given that the main difference is that new QI includes a load of stuff that a relatively small proportion of photographers may use or want to pay for. Usually vendors try to seduce their existing users to move along with them. MC seems to be saying, well, you bought a product that is now really a dead end, so now buy QIU which isn't - but look, it does Raw!
It's barely 9m since I u/g to Studio, and that's not currently a pitch with much appeal. I accept that eventually I will likely move to QIU but it will be for the printing. I have at least 8 or 9 Raw processing progs I've paid for and don't use, plus a bunch of abandoned evaluation versions, because they don't do what I want the way I want. I really don't need another one. In this forum there are others asking for a cut-down QIU that only does printing, so it isn't just me. YMMV of course and clearly does. We'll just have to see what Mr Darwin thinks.