![]() It didn’t create a lot of hard drive space but that’s OK.Photo Mechanic is a Mac and Windows media browser designed by Camera Bits that allows you to manage your files. Last time around I got rid of seven old and never used applications and all of their supporting files. I don’t need/use/want any of those other 32 bit apps so they are going next time I have a maintenance and update purge on my main production machine. On top of Photo Mechanic and Colormunki Display I also have three obscure printing and scanning apps from Canon that work with my old Pixma all-in-one printer/copier scanner, a bit of residual Adobe updater software and a file-renaming utility. Looking just now I currently have seven 32 bit apps. I use an application called Clean My Mac X on my computers and it has a tab in the uninstaller menu that allows you to single out (and delete) 32 bit applications. As Camera Bits have admitted, 32 bit isn’t as compatible with the latest operating systems as it should or could be. X-Rite seem pretty relaxed about it but I have noticed that if I leave my Colormunki plugged in to monitor the ambient light levels my computer appears to run a little slower and so a perceived or actual disadvantage of one 32 bit app has caused me to change how I work – and that’s not good. You can still walk into a shop and you can still log onto an online shop and buy the Colormunki devices but you cannot get software that lets them function as they should. The X-Rite support pages have a comforting “we are working on it” message and I am sure that they will eventually produce a 64 bit application but why does it have to take so long? So many other companies are up-to-date with their app development and it isn’t as if Apple haven’t been signalling this for a long time. So, which other application is looking likely to be the last of my 32 bit “must-haves”? Well, that would be the Colormunki Display monitor calibration app that drives my trusty Colormunki Display monitor calibration device. ![]() Regular readers of this blog will be a bit bored with my praise of Camera Bits and for Photo Mechanic and so anyone wanting to know more should click here to read my workflow greatest hits post from a few months ago. I haven’t seen a price yet but I’m sure that it will be competitive. I am keen to see if it can match or even exceed NeoFinder and make me choose between the two for my digital asset management needs. ![]() This promises to add the much anticipated and long awaited catalogue function. They have also, rather more quietly, said that a second version of Photo Mechanic 6 called Photo Mechanic 6 Plus will be available to try out about four weeks later on April 22nd. For anyone with an existing PM5 license the upgrade is US$89 whilst a full new license is US$150. That way I can satisfy my curiosity without risking my production machines with untested or insufficiently tested software.Ĭamera bits have labelled the upcoming Photo Mechanic 6 as “faster and more compatible” whilst also signalling that they’ve made a few changes to the interface, made it 2-3 times faster and added a few new tricks too. Because I have the luxury of having three Macs I always have one of them running the latest (or even beta) versions of everything. It has been a while coming, and I have mentioned it here on this blog once or twice already, when the next iteration of OSX is installed it stops us being able to use 32 bits apps altogether. As things stand there are only two bits of software that I use on a very regular basis that are still only available in 32 bit and the most important (and dare I say “most exciting”) of those, Photo Mechanic, gets an upgrade later this month. Slowly but surely application developers are replacing their 32 bit versions for Apple OSX with 64 bit ones.
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