

Many people just need a way to organise and browse through their images. But not everyone needs this level of complexity. You can organise your images into folders, apply ratings, add colour labels, assign keywords, group them into collections as well as lots of other things. If there’s one thing Adobe Lightroom does really well, it’s help you manage your images. Not because I need to replace Adobe but because I know a lot of people will like it and I want to be able to use it well.
#PIXEL TARGETING IN ACDSEE PHOTO EDITOR 10 SOFTWARE#
After a couple of days experimenting with the software I purchased ACDSee Ultimate for Windows.

This grabbed my attention and I decided to take up a 30-day free trial. Recently, a couple of people have suggested I look at the latest version ACDSee as it was a super image editor. That’s when I made the switch to using Lightroom 3 to manage my photo library. The software became almost useless in my workflow. Expression Media had even more features, but some of these gave me big problems. Microsoft then bought iView who rebadged MediaPro as Expression Media. This had a lot more features but was more difficult to use. I can’t recall exactly why, but I decided to make the switch to a product called MediaPro from iView. At the time the features were basic, but they were easy to use.

In this article I’m going to share one of the lesser known alternatives.īack in 2004, I was using a software package called ACDSee to manage my image library. A lot of people are finding they can’t justify the cost and want a viable Adobe Lightroom alternative. Today, things have changed, and a lot of people are finding the Adobe software rental model expensive. If you wanted to manage your digital image library, you needed library management software, which was quite expensive. Back in the distant history of time (before 2007) Adobe Lightroom didn’t exist.
