![]() ![]() 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. ![]()
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