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Surround yourself in 360° and take advantage of another powerful tool we offer. Download our complimentary PIXPRO 360 VR Suite and access a treasure chest of helpful and user friendly software, utilities and features that will allow you to use your ORBIT360 4K with your personal computer. Compatible with Mac (macOS 10.10 and above) and Windows 7 (and higher), the PIXPRO suite offers you the following tools and functionality to take your 360° photos and videos to the next level:
Surround yourself in 360° and take advantage of another powerful tool we offer. Download our complimentary PIXPRO 360 VR Suite and access a treasure chest of helpful and user friendly software, utilities and features that will allow you to use your SP360 4K with your personal computer. Compatible with Mac (macOS 10.10 and above) and Windows 7 (and higher), the PIXPRO suite offers you the following tools and functionality to take your 360° photos and videos to the next level:
by Mike Pasini (August 2012)Solve the puzzle of what to do all summer -- and get your photos noticed -- with a new online jigsaw app from Carolina Road Software. Read our review to see just how much fun we had (at our own expense).LensDoc Plug-InReviewbyStephanie Boozer and Mike Pasini (August 2001)Geometric distortion (barrel and pincushion distortion) is a perpetual problem in consumer-level digicam lenses. Barrel distortion (the edges of the image bulging outward) in wide angle shots is often particularly pronounced. There's now a great solution to this, in the form of a software package from Andromeda Software, called LensDoc. IR all-around writer-gal Stephanie Boozer and Newsletter Editor Mike Pasini put their heads together and came up with a great review of the product. Read the review for the details (or if you're not sure what this barrel distortion thing is all about - there's a great example there).Lightroom 4 BetaReviewbyMike Pasini (January 2012)In the middle of a dry December, we attended an hour briefing on Adobe Lightroom 4 with Product Manager Tom Hogarty. We've been following Lightroom's development since its inception. With each revision our wish list shrinks. This time we checked off video and soft proofing, to name the two biggest new features. See what else we checked off in our software preview.NoisewareReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (March 2007)While our camera reviews often point out that a camera's high ISO images just don't hold together well enough to print, there is a solution. Photoshop-compatible plug-in Noiseware from Imagenomic uses artificial intelligence to analyze the noise in an image without requiring a profile for your camera. And the more you use it, the better it gets, learning from each image it processes. Over the past year, we've been using it to salvage high ISO images from a number of recent cameras and have, as part of the review, built a gallery of the most representative of them so you can see exactly how Noiseware performs. Read our review for the whole story.Optics Pro 7Reviewby Mike Pasini (November 2011)DxO has released Optics Pro v7 with some impressive improvements including faster processing speed, particularly for Raw images; image management features; simplified workflow; improved lens softness correction; and Improved saturated color protection. Along with those have come improved stability and more camera modules joining features we've long appreciated in Optics Pro, including its Raw converter, noise removal, single shot HDR exposure control, optical corrections, color control and the DxO FilmPack plug-in. Read the review for the full story.Optipix3 Photoshop Plug-insReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (July 2004) They brought 16-bit channels to the ordinary digicam, then beat Adobe to 16-bit editing tools in Photoshop. Now Reindeer Graphics has released the third version of its little image engine that could with four exciting new tools. Harnessed in Photoshop actions they're one great way to run a railroad. Read our report.Perfect365Reviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (November 2011)Arcsoft has just released Perfect365, a new portrait retouching application that runs on Windows and iOS. While offering some standard tricks of the trade like face reshaping, teeth whitening, eye brightening and blemish removal, it goes a bit further. See how much further in our review.PhanfareReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (March 2004)Phanfare, a new online photo sharing service, isn't free, but it doesn't need an Upload button. And that's priceless! Read our report.PholiumReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (April 2012)If you've been holding your breath waiting for an app that does photo ebooks on the iPad, you can now exhale. 58 North has just released Pholium, with which you can create and publish your own photo ebooks. Read our review for the whole story.PhoozL IQReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (March 2012)As if digital photography isn't perplexing enough, Harald Johnson has just released two versions of PhoozL IQ for iPad to complement the existing iPhone/iPod Touch versions. The larger screen is somewhat more embarrassing but the fun (and the education) makes up for it. Read our review for the whole story.PhotoRescue by DataRescueReviewbyMike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (September 2002)We've spent years perfecting our Disaster Simulator. While some people think it's just a wind-up alarm clock with glow-in-the-dark (radiating, that is) numerals, most realize it's not innocently ticking away. Disaster, we've found over the years, is just a matter of time. But while we were waiting (and the Disaster Simulator was ticking), DataRescue ( ) developed PhotoRescue with an impressive list of features.Portrait ProfessionalReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (July 2007)Professional portrait photographers know flattery is good for business. And now Anthropics has automated that flattery with Portrait Professional, a Windows application that easily handles routine retouching like tooth and eye whitening but goes further to include head sculpting, too. That last bit of magic is feasible thanks to a clever and unique way of describing a head. But it also makes possible to distinguish facial features like skin defects from pores and small wrinkles from the larger ones that define character. And that's just the beginning of the story. Read our review for the scoop.QPictReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (June 2000)This one is strictly for Macintosh users. If you're looking for a great catalog program, definitely take a look at Rune Lindman's QPict. From batch processing to scripting to indexing images, this program is definitely easy to use yet advanced enough to keep a " master" computer user interested. Check out our review.SilverFast AiReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (November 2002)LaserSoft Imaging is a German firm whose CEO and president is Karl-Heniz Zahorsky. "The original motive for the 'invention' -- meaning the conception, development and additional development of SiverFast Ai -- was to be able to produce one's 'own' image successfully, without requiring extensive training in reproduction techniques," he said. Indeed, the product packs a lot of intelligence into itself. And while it is primarily a high-end tool equally at ease in either RGB or CMYK color modes, it does provide a sort of automatic mode for beginners called the ScanPilot. SilverFast 6, the Swiss Army knife of scanning software, impresses an old lithographer with how easy it makes it get great results -- even for novices.SnapseedReviewby Mike Pasini (December 2011)Fortunately some of our favorite desktop tools are migrating their way to iOS and Android devices. Other than Adobe, we were glad to see Nik Software bundle up its marvelous editing technology into a little app called Snapseed. We spent a few weeks working with Snapseed on an iPad 2 and, frankly, it's software we could live with. A long, long time. Read the review for the full story.Snapseed DesktopReviewby Mike Pasini (March 2012)Having found the interface of its dreams for all of its plug-in technology with Snapseed, Nik Software wisely didn't stop there. They brought the interface to the desktop -- both OS X and Windows -- and for just $19.99 through iTunes, the App Store or from Nik Software. Considering the plug-ins themselves run in the three figures, that represents quite a bargain. So we took it for a spin. Read our review for the details.SoundPix Plus 2.0 Reviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (February 2004)Tired of emailing pictures that require a thousand words of explanation? SoundPix Plus can send a picture with audio embedded in the Exif header! Read our review for the details.StickyAlbumsReviewby Mike Pasini (September 2012)There are two things we really like about StickyAlbums. First, it gets your images off your hard drive and onto your client's mobile devices where they can easily share them. Click an app icon and presto, you've got a slide show going. Second, StickyAlbums sets a new bar for customer service (not that you'll ever need it). That alone makes it worth reading our review.TabbloReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (September 2006)This online sharing service lets you create photo montages to share online for free or print as posters -- gorgeous posters up to five feet by 16 inches.Tiffen Photo fx UltraReviewby Mike Pasini (August 2012)Tiffen knows the difference between a filter and a special effect. Fortunately, both are on the guest list for the party that's Photo fx Ultra, which runs rather nicely on a iPad with iOS 4.3 or later. Now in its fifth version, Photo fx Ultra provides eight categories of 77 filters with 934 presets (all with thumbnail previews of your actual image). Read our review for the whole story.Varifocus Plug-InReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (February 2001)There is a very fine line any image editor must learn to observe. It's the line beyond which believability dissolves. Image editors make it very easy to composite images, moving a gorilla shot at the local zoo to your living room couch, say. But it isn't believable (generally speaking) because you are mixing outdoor light and indoor with completely different shadow effects to boot. So when we say you can do selective focus in your image editor, we aren't talking about your everyday Guassian blur. We're talking about using a sophisticated Photoshop-compatible plug-in like Andromeda's VariFocus. VariFocus provides an easy-to-use graduated blur with a comprehensive set of masks for all your image editing fantasies. Check the review for all the details!ViewPointReviewby Mike Pasini (September 2012)Ever try to get rid of those geometric distortions you get when you shoot wide angle or even just point up at a tall building (or any building)? Did you think your image editing software was going to make it easy? Are you alive to tell the tale? Well, survivor, you can relax because DxO Labs has wrapped its anamorphic and keystoning technology in a sweet little package that does all that with just a click or four. Read our review for the details.Vuescan 8.1Reviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (December 2004)We finally got our hands on a scanner long enough to review Ed Hamrick's VueScan. And we're glad we did. Read our review to find out why.Whiteboard PhotoReviewbyStephanie Boozer with "Color Commentary" by Dave Etchells (March 2000)Ever take notes at a meeting or in school? (That covers pretty much everybody, doesn't it?) Now, there's an incredibly slick little program from Pixid you can use with your digicam to turn any whiteboard, blackboard, or even green-board scribbles into perfectly neat handouts or meeting notes! This one's a real winner, not just for corporate types, but for students & teachers as well. One of the handiest programs we've seen in quite a while! Check it out!WD PhotosReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (April 2010)Western Digital has released a free iPhone app that can display your entire photo collection without storing it on your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad. Instead, it accesses thumbnails optimized for the small screen on your network-attached server through MioNet.com making quick work of the downloads. It's your photos from your cloud on your iPhone. Read our review for the story.93 Photo StreetReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (August 2004)When Transmutable Software released its $30 93 Photo Street a few days ago, we yelled, "Eureka!" Plenty of prospectors have perished with a map in their hands looking for the spot where the treasure is buried. Trevor F. Smith's program eschews the X for an image. And that's worth a thousand words.ACDSee ProReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (February 2007)ACD Systems ( ) calls ACDSee Pro a "photo manager." Designed to streamline a photographic workflow, it competes on the Windows platform only with Adobe's Lightroom. Like Lightroom, it has relied on user feedback to evolve into a particularly useful tool.Adobe Configurator 1.0Reviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (October 2008)Photoshop may be the industry standard -- but that covers a lot of industries. So the program's interface is pretty general. Enter Configurator. Adobe will release this utility on Adobe Labs when Creative Suite 4 ships but we got a prelease version to play with. And we went right to work, building two custom panels to handle two tasks we do every day: resize images and retouch them. It took no programming smarts to built the panels (just drag and drop) but we were surprised by how useful they were. Read our review for the full story.Adobe Creative Suite 2: BridgeReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (July 2005)Adobe Bridge is a new application in the Creative Suite, which we will be reviewing in several articles, that borrows features from your operating system, Web browser organizer and image editor to make your workflow more efficient. This first incarnation, included with the CS2 versions of Photoshop, InDesign, Illustrator or GoLive, proves its mettle and promises even more. Read our report. (This review is based on the Adobe Bridge found in CS2; however, this program is still available in the latest version of Adobe Creative Suite.)Adobe Creative Suite 2: PhotoshopReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (August 2005)Adobe told us they used Photoshop's 15-year milestone to rethink some basic operations. The goal was to make the product more user-friendly for the legions of digital photographers marching their way. We highlight the improvements to tools, workflow and customization before taking a closer look at a few significant new features. Read our report.Adobe Creative Suite 2: Running The Suite Reviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (August 2005)We conclude our three-part review of Adobe Creative Suite 2 with this look at the underlying architecture of the Suite. On the document side, we recall Adobe's PostScript beginnings and track its evolution into the cross-platform, device independent PDF model. Then we look at the use of metadata formats like XML and XMP to build "smart" assets of your images. Finally, we do a couple of real-world projects with the suite taking advantage of Smart Objects and Object Styles. Read our report.Adobe Creative Suite 4 for PhotographersReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (September 2008)When Adobe shipped Creative Suite 3 in March 2007, the company was already hard at work on the just-announced Creative Suite 4. We were among a group of reviewers and analysts who attended a CS4 boot camp for two days in July and we've been using a beta version of the Master Collection since August. Read our review for the details on this release.Adobe Creative Suite 5: Photoshop PreviewPreviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (April 2010)Call it whatever you want -- Photoshop CS5 (officially), White Rabbit (its code name), Photoshop 12 (who's counting?) -- it's here.We've been playing with a Dec. 12, 2009 build for about a week on a unibody MacBook Pro. And it's such a fast combination, we finished this preview early enough to tell you all about it just as Adobe is announcing Creative Suite 5. Read our preview for the details on this release.Adobe Elements 9 -- Magic Kit for Photos & MoviesPreviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (September 2010)This release is, like your digicam, about both photos and movies. You can buy Photoshop Elements alone or Premiere Elements by itself, but the bundle is almost the same price. And if you're a Mac aficionado, Elements 9 is a different ball game than Elements 8. You get what Windows magicians have been getting all along: the Organizer, Premiere, the whole ball of wax. Read our preview for the highlights of this release.Adobe Elements 10Previewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (September 2011)With the launch of Elements 10 on Elements' tenth anniversary, Adobe hopes to bring compelling new magic to still photographers exploring video. With both still and video options on everything from smart phones to dSLRs, it's no longer a question of whether to shoot photos or video but of when to shoot which to best tell the story. Read our preview for the highlights of this release.AvisaPhotoReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (October 2002)Color corrections and changes are just one trick Asiva Photo can perform. It's equally adept at sharpening or softening, enhancing detail and applying some special effects. And all in 16-bit channels, too. An interesting application with some unique capabilities not found elsewhere. Camera Raw & JPEG 2000 Filters by AdobeReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (April 2003)Much as we may marvel over true color sensors, the future of digital imaging would seem better served by increased dynamic range in the sensors themselves, increased channel bit depth and lossless compression algorithms like JPEG 2000. Capture NXReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (May 2006)Nikon and Nik Software have collaborated on the next release of Nikon's well-regarded NEF image editor, Capture. But this version also handles JPEGs and TIFFs -- from any camera (or scanner) -- and adds Nik's intriguing U Point technology, which makes image editing as easy as using a grease pencil.We got our hands on a beta copy of Capture NX and have started yet another Diary to chronicle our experience with it. In our first report, we illuminate U Point technology and describe what happened when we threw three typical image editing problems at NX.CarePageReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (February 2003)The service was inspired by the Langshur family's use of the Web to keep their loved ones updated on the status of their first child Matthew. They used the Web to save themselves from having to phone everyone with updates on Matthew's condition and eventual release from the hospital.CumulusReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (September 2001)The second thing most digicam owners discover (after they realize that they really do need rechargeable batteries) is that photo files need management. If you thought the shoeboxes full of photos in your closet were an unmanageable mess, wait till you see your hard drive after a month or two of digicam ownership! IR Newsletter Editor Mike Pasini took a look at Canto's Cumulus image-management program and generally liked what he saw. This is a true industrial-strength application for people who really need to get organized (if you make money from your photos, or ever hope to, it's almost mandatory), and Mike's review pokes into all the nooks and crannies. Highly recommended reading if you need to bring order to your digital shoeboxes!iLife '04Reviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (January 2004)We found it more convenient to chisel open our wallet and carve out $49 for Apple's iLife '04 the day it came out than to go through our usual channels (including the cardboard sign promising, "Will Review For Food"). But the experience was emblematic of the package. Read our story and weep.Kodak EasyShareReviewby Mike Pasini, Editor, The Imaging Resource Newsletter (December 2002)Kodak has "unbundled" the EasyShare software, making it available as a free download from their website. They're evidently banking on the added revenue from thousands of people printing more pictures on Kodak inkjet or photo paper to make up for any money they'll lose from decreased camera sales. I asked Newsletter Editor Mike Pasini to take a look at the EasyShare software system in its current incarnation, and he responded with a detailed review that I've posted for your perusal. If you've just gotten a new digicam for Christmas (or are at least confident that one will be under the tree tomorrow), you really owe it to yourself to check out the EasyShare software system. It's about as easy as it gets...LightroomReviewbyMike Pasini (January 2006)Adobe Lightroom's job is to help digital photographers with high-volume image workflows get their work done more efficiently. It does that primarily by presenting a streamlined interface targeted to common tasks. 2b1af7f3a8