![]() It is. Lightzone's vector areas with smart edge detection is sort of similar. It'll have to be intuitive and powerful enough that a beginner to advanced photographer can make it work. ![]() It'll have to be math/vector based so that it uses little bandwidth. The race to practical local adjustments that can effectively ripple across all of our devices so that edits we “brush” on from a pad or phone will show up quickly on our desktop. ![]() And last I checked, the developer of that approach worked for Apple. Another vector based approach for local adjustments that might work across multiple devices would be like Lightzone used (before Aperture and Lightroom). And now the Nik collection is free and we can probably anticipate that going someday in a future Google spring cleaning. But that didn't work for some reason because they quietly removed Nik technology from their online tools a little while back. Math is always lighter than pixels ( as we saw when Flash came to dominance). Which is probably what Google was thinking when they acquired Nik. Which means to ripple changes across multiple devices requires transmitting “heavy” pixel data. The solution would be to make it “light” vector based local adjustments. But there is the challenge, right? I believe that Apple discontinued Aperture because local adjustments were brushed.
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