I think one person perfectly worded the biggest misconception with raw when they said "I thought a main purpose of using raw was to tweak and diddle as you put it". These people are used to raw converters where you have to tweak to get the most of them and they've lost sight of the fact that the real purpose of raw is to provide a higher quality end result! They've never seen a raw tool that can actually analyze the photo and pull great detail, lighting, and color out of the photo so they are "stuck" with the old mentality that if you shoot raw, you'd better be prepared to take the time to open each raw shot in an editor and drag a bunch of sliders to get it to look really nice. They probably don't believe that with Ultimate, you'll probably only need to fiddle with 10% of your raws to get them perfect... instead of editing 100% in other tools. To that end, I think that DPR thread would benefit from thoughts from some of the many people here who know by experience how well QU can do on raw photos.
As most of you know, I am a believer in the "Show a sample or example" method of explaining.
This is sort of difficult on the forum due to the restrictions of file size and total bytes per post.
Let me try anyway!!
Qimage Ultimate looks at the Raw image and decides, based on Mike Chaney's own invented/discovered algorithm, how to apply Exposure and PLUS fill individually to each image.
He has some formula that measures bright and dark areas over the major portion of the image and applies what it deems is appropriate.
It still is a computer formula, and cannot be expected to know that
Uncle Harry over in the lower left was the person you wanted most. It doesn't read minds.
So what do we get?
We get a program that decides the initial
exposure and Fill needed on an individual basis for each image.... and still leaves you options to change anything to suit your needs.
Other programs allow a preset.... same values applied to every raw image it sees. Naturally, you have to adjust so many because of that alone.
Others I know, shut off presets for that reason, and like to twiddle from scratch....
Let's look at two samples. 076 shows an image as it came from the camera with only Q Ultimate's initial decoding. Notice the FILL at +4 and the overall exposure in an excellent balance between sky, water, and overall.
Now let's look at 077 ~ This one has a Fill of +5.... different, and done automatically. Qimage saw a difference in overall light and adjusted for it.
** Note: The fact that there are no red brackets around any control (exposure, fill, white balance, and HDR) indicates that it is the default for THAT image!!
** Note2: If you do a White Balance, and Qimage detects enough change in brightness, the Fill will adjust itself.
** Note3: The lowest value of the automatic Fill is zero. If you still need to darken an image you either change the exposure using the grids, or move the Fill slider into the minus side.
I get 90% happy exposures and just take my shots into the editor to sharpen a bit, and straighten my horizon. I am famous for crooked images.
I can add anything in the editor as most of you know,,, but starting with a proper Raw image is paramount.
I need that 90%... after all, I am over 80, and cannot afford to waste what time I have left twiddling when Mike twiddles for me.
That's why I implore, beseech, cajole, and plead that you demo triers, take some time to really see how good Q Ultimate really is.
Have fun,
Fred
PS. I apologize for the low quality of the screen snaps, but I had to scrunch 'em pretty good to fit in the 128K limit.