With to many peeks and perks you probably get a platform that will be very hard to support on the long run. The course of management to cut back on having multiple UIs, different functionality and to get a more unified engine to drive EN on the different platforms for me sounds good. For me getting a better iOS app (more like desktop) would be number one, with features like merging notes, selecting and modifying several notes at once (tagging, table of content, presentation mode etc.), plus split mode to have 2 EN sessions open. HEIC would make this easier, avoiding RAW.Ībout what to support everybody can make his own priority list. I often take pictures in RAW using Halide, which allows for post processing an iPhone picture like one from a DSLR. Maybe the iPhone camera was not regarded as a source for real photography - which probably changed now with the iPhone 11, that has a fantastic set of cameras. So I think this background conversion happened on the OS level, not by EN.ġst as as user of nearly exclusively Apple-devices for sure I would like to have HEIC supported in EN.Ģnd EN is not alone in the club of those programs that doesn’t - among them dedicated Photo editing programs. When I exported it out of EN it showed as a JPEG. The picture was transferred and showed, but I think it was converted into a JPEG on the transfer (no way to look this up in EN, at least I could not see it). Yesterday I tried it out before posting: Taking a HEIC from the Photos App on my MacBook Pro / Catalina and drag & drop it into an EN note. They know HEIC, can handle it, and even use the depth information (if available) to blur the background creating a bokeh-effect in post processing, like portrait mode on the iPhone does. ![]() Others are more advanced: I am running GraphicsConverter on my Mac. Even dedicated Photo editing software like Affinity Photo does not "know" it. ![]() It was thought to replace the JPGs as the new standard, but up to now the main promoter is Apple. And it uses 10bits instead of 8 to define the brightness of each color of a pixel, which avoids the "burned out" or "lost in black" areas found on JPGs.įurthermore for pictures taken on multiple camera devices like the new iPhones (or many Android phones), the HEIC picture contains the information about which part of the picture was how far away from the camera. It uses a completely different compression algorithm that is not creating the fractal artifacts found on JPGs. It also runs on macOS 13 through 10.7.HEIC is often described as an improvement of JPG, but it is a replacement. You can install this in Windows 11, 10, 8, or 7. It not only converts image files, but also video and audio files.
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