
I ahd never noticed this before, as I was using DxO viewpoint to correct for a manual (non-electronic) lens attacged to a Panasonic G5, there was no lens information atatched to the file. I note that DxO Viewpoint Standalone works correctly for the same image file. Is there a work around, can I run a terminal command to fix this? The OSX sandbox is preventing the DxO Viewpoint Plugin from opening files. 6:07:59.756 PM DxOViewPoint2: RVS:_54-_block_invoke_0319 : Timeout occured while waiting for the window 6:07:49.826 PM : Sandboxed client (1505) is attempting to use an NSOpenPanel without either the .user-selected.read-only or .user-selected.read-write entitlement.

6:07:34.660 PM Aperture: new task is staring 6:07:32.886 PM Aperture: Launched app: /Library/Application Support/DxO Labs/dvpv2/DxO ViewPoint 2.app/Contents/MacOS/DxOViewPoint2 I note that in OSX console, I get the following messages, which IMO explains all: When I open a file with the DxO viewpoint 2 Plugin from Aperture 3.4.5, and then attempt to use automatic distortion correction from DxO, when DxO asks me to to open the original file, and I click on "OK", there is a considerable wait, there is no menu to open the original file, and eventually the option window disappears, no distortion correction occurs. The file which could not be accessed was a JPG. I have submitted the following trouble report to DxO:Īperture 3.4.5, OASX 10.8.5, Plugin 2.1.6, Non=Admin account. Once the image is selected, simply drag it into the 'Project' pane at bottom.The viewpoint plugin does not work quite as flawlessy as you might expect from my earlier posting, or other psotings here. The image I have selected to process is the one at bottom right and is a Jpeg file from the Fujifilm HS-10. What this is doing is adding a 'sharpening' step and creating artifacts. Update 281110 - Since publishing this, I have found that it is better to turn off the 'DxO Lens Softness' adjustment, particularly with Jpeg images. Note : To see larger sizes of the images, simply click on the image So, intrigued, I downloaded it and started playing.īelow, are just a few screen shots, and edit examples, showing some of the different things you can use DxO for.

Recently, I received an email from DxO mentioning that their new version (6.5) also did Single-Shot HDR. The main reason I stopped using it was due to my upgrading from Photoshop CS2 to CS3, then CS4, and now CS5. I was using DxO Optics Pro quite regularly a couple of years back, for my S100 fs images. This is part of a 'How To' series on post process work.
