![]() You pick the output destination, naming options, output file format, quality, and color space. You get to decide what family of “looks” filters, and the specific AI filter to use when each image is processed as well as the level of the filter’s strength, from 0% to 100%. The batch processing window has a couple of default options to export images for email or the web. If Luminar really bills itself as easing photographer’s workflow, it should actually make that workflow easier! I also decided to try the batch processing option to get an idea of how practical that process is. Luminar has a complete suite of image management tools that include folders, where Luminar can manage your image folders and albums, where you can put similar images from different physical folders – think playlists in iTunes. I created a new catalog for these images and let Luminar grab the images once I copied them into the catalog. If we’re going to have AI do the heavy lifting here, let’s see how intelligent it really is. When I chose images for this review, I decided to grab a selection of pretty good images, and some pretty bad ones, in terms of lighting and contrast. While I have an SSD, as stated above, my images are on network attached storage, so I pay a performance hit there as well. Based on the requirements, my laptop is at the bottom in terms of RAM, but better than the minimum processor speed. ![]() I ran tests on my Microsoft Surface Book with 8GM RAM, Core i7-6600u 2.6GHz processor and Win 10 Pro 64-bit. Hard disk 10 Gb free space, SSD for best performance.Operating System Windows 7 (only 64-bit OS), Windows 8.1 (only 64-bit OS), Windows 10 (only 64-bit OS).OpenGL 3.3 or later compatible Graphics Cards.Windows-based hardware PC with mouse or similar input device.
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