
Same issue with Ufraw (although I haven't tried a build for this), I did build dcraw latest from source and that worked well but very few controls. I have tried building the latest stable one (which is 1.2.3 I think) but with limited success. Thanks for that! My problem is the Wine version in the Ubuntu 10.04 repositories is quite ancient. I prefer DPP for the integrated lens distortion & CA correction, though that's also possible from native Linux tools through the Lensfun library. I've also used rawtherapee and ufraw, both of which work fine. On a fast machine the perfomance is reasonable. I'm using DPP 3.10.0.0 under WINE 1.3.37 on a Fedora 16 machine.
#Rawtherapee 2.4.1 install
Having a full install of XP-Pro SP3 that starts from nil to usable in 7-8 seconds, is a good time-saver.
#Rawtherapee 2.4.1 windows
You can also run Windows in V-Box to check or test things for Windows-using friends. I've been using PCLOS for just on 5 years, but do run other Distros - including the 'Bunties - in Virtual-Box for a look-see.

Type > apt-get -help < in terminal for all the options. (apt-get does work in terminal if you want that. The Repository has over 12,000 Distro-Optimised applications, tools, utilities, etc, for rapid multi-installs with the GUI version of Synaptic. PCLOS (PCLinuxOS) - does the KDE optimising very well. Where some Linux apps don't run very new RAW versions (I had initial problems with Fuji's HS10 RAF RAW, and this was a temp solution), Linux DNGconverter (not a clone of the Adobe DNG one) - will convert RAWs to DNG.įor KDE Enviro, in the 'Bunties, Kubuntu has it, or you might try one of the Distros that uses KDE as its primary Enviro. At present, RT-version 2.4.1 is the 'stable' version, the new version is still a work-in-progress. Raw-Therapee is a "more conventional" RAW post-processing app, with hundreds of options, sliders, modes, etc. If you want to use RAW in Gimp - make sure that the DCRAW-Gimp-2.x is 9.03 or later. Ensure that you're using DCRAW-9.03 or later so Digikam can open and use current RAW versions. All just mentioned also work as Batch.ĭigikam with many RAW options and processing (saves to 8 or 16 bit TIFF) - works very well in KDE. KDE is a better Multimedia Enviro, as it has more of "its own" MM functions - e.g, Kim for quick right-click Menu conversion between formats - JPEG-TIFF-GIF-PNG, resizing, including Custom-Resize, Compress 70-80-90% / Compress Custom, WebExport to presets, and a lot more. Enrigonz - If you're using Ubuntu, you're on the Gnome Enviro.
