Adobe DNG

For some time, Adobe systems has promoted their DNG file format as an alternative to proprietary raw file formats that are defined (and in general not documented) by camera manufacturers). I have been skeptical, given that Adobe tends to be one of the least open and most proprietary companies on the planet. However, there is no denying their leading and central role in photographic processing software, and after many years I have begun to be swayed by the arguments.

In September of 2013, I began using Lightroom and have found it to be ideal for my purposes. It is possible when importing images into Lightroom from a flash card to have lightroom do the conversion to DNG format "on the fly". The time necessary to do this is in fact one of the major objections to using DNG by some parties. I view it as a one time penalty that I am quite willing to pay for the benefits later.

Advantages:

Frankly it was the no sidecar file argument that persuaded me. Adobe has long claimed that "camera manufacturers drop support for their raw formats", but this has never made sense to me. I don't use any software from Canon to process my cameras raw files (Canon does provide "DPP" (digital photo professional), but I have never used it). The only vendor providing software to read my raw files is Adobe, and unless Adobe plans to drop support for Canon's CR2 raw file format (which they are more than capable of doing), I don't see the point.

I was pleased to find out that the DNG file format it a published and open standard. I suppose I won't really believe it until I have written some software of my own to read DNG files, but Adobe does make a specification document available:


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Tom's Digital Photography Info / [email protected]