
Note that I repeated this using a Windows Acer i7 2.7 GHz Quad-Core notebook with very close results, so clearly it was not a hardware or operating system issue.Īnd to complete, MP is a 32-bit application that will not run on OSX 10.15 and up. It's a 2.7 GHz i5-2500S Quad-Core iMac with 32 GB of memory and a 1 TB SSD. My computer is (was) not new but perfectly adequate for my work. Of course, being in a network server slows things a lot, at least 10-20 times slower than if it was stored on a local drive, even more, if this drive is an SSD.

The MP catalogs were stored in the computer internal HD, an 1 TB Samsung EVO 850 SSD, and the images on an external USB-3 LaCie storage or on a CentOS Linux NFS server with a gigabit Ethernet connection capable of a high-speed transfer (about 100 MB/s sustained). I got corrupted catalogs more than once and I was saved by the backups I did periodically. I also noticed some instabilities with High Sierra. MP also is notorious for catalog corruption.Īt the migration time, my MP catalog had 140K images, it took almost 8 minutes to load the catalog. The problem is that Capture One is mainly a photo editor and raw converter with some DAM features and the once excellent user interface was changed to a form I don't like it.įor a long time, MP worked well with my image library, but it started to be very sluggish and slow to start when my catalog passed 75K images. The perpetual license of Capture One Pro 12 cost at this post date, 299 Euros, or if you're crazy enough, you can join the subscription plan for 20 Euros/month.
#Corel aftershot pro 3 vs picasa full#
Phase One sort of merged it with Capture One, but of course, if you want to still use it, you must pay for a full license of it and it's no cheap.
#Corel aftershot pro 3 vs picasa update#
This last update still works on OSX 10.13 High Sierra and I have no intention to test it on higher versions since Media pro was discontinued killed about one year ago.

It worked very well with OSX 10.8 Mountain Lion and then an update was launched in late 2016 to address compatibility with OSX 10.12 Sierra and 10.13 El Capitan, but it was a PAID update that was offered for 39 Euro, a total absurd since it didn't offer any improvements. It was reasonably priced from 139 Euros in 2012 when I started to use it.

All posts here reflect my personal impressions and experiences with products, programs, and equipment.įoreword For a considerable time, Phase One Media Pro was my favorite digital asset management program (DAM). I'm not affiliated with any software maker aforementioned in this blog neither monetize sellings from them.
