![]() ![]() In other words your file sizes will more than triple when you convert them. But since TIFF is a debayered file, each photosite in a RAW (which would have only included single-channel 14-bit data) will be converted into a full color "pixel" contiaining 16-bit three channel color data. The other alternative is to use DPP to convert the RAW files into TIFF - which is stil a lossless format. So if you want to do anything with those files using any other program, that 3rd party program probably can't open your. The downside is that now it's a DNG file and generally nothing else supports DNG other than Adobe (Adobe published it as a standard that I think others can use roytaly-free. Adobe gives away their DNG converter (it's free - you have to go to their website to download it.) DNG and CS2 should be able to open that file. This means you can use their DNG converter to convert the 70D's. you can use Adobe's DNG converter (that's a separate program - not built into CS2) and it does get RAW updates. CS2 doesn't have RAW support for the 70D, nor would Adobe make an update for it.īut as Ernie points out above. In each case, once they released a newer version, it wasn't too long before RAW updates stopped being made available for the prior version.Īs CS2 is very very old. I went from CS3, to CS4, to CS5 (I now use the cloud version - Photoshop CC). You must get the RAW converter from Adobe.īut Adobe only provides RAW updates for current versions of software. ![]() They wont use the Canon provided converter and even many OS vendors (Apple & Microsoft) provide RAW converters, but Adobe doesn't use those either. When you use Adobe software they only use their own RAW converters. ![]()
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