Notice on the HUD you have a single option, Auto Select. Once you click Start Session, the HUD appears. The final option on the bottom there is Show HUD (Heads Up Display), which you’ll want to leave on as that presents some nifty info about the files being captured, plus the ability to trigger the camera from the HUD ( very cool in a studio product-shoot environment). You can even choose to backup your photos on capture to a remote location, and apply adjustments on the fly. Start TetheringĬlose the import window, create a new project, and fire up tethering.įrom the File menu, choose Tether > Start New Session… and that will open the Tether Settings dialog, with most of the same options you get when you import photos.Īs you can see, you can choose where to store the files, renaming schemes, and metadata presets. Look at that, Aperture knows what my camera is! Super sweet. I’m 99% sure that in Aperture nothing would pop open in the Import window, but I could be wrong there.
Sofortbild nikon d100 software#
Previously, unless you had Canon’s hideously unreliable software running, nothing much happened. Plug in That Canon!įirst thing I did was launch Aperture 3 and plug in the 1Ds Mk III (with a USB cable). I’ve just tested this with both the Canon EOS 1Ds Mark III and the 5D Mark II, and it’s beautiful. The title says it all… proper tethering support is finally here! No more Hot Folder actions, no more dropped connections (well at least that’s the idea), no more rubbish Canon software, no more crashed Canon mid-shoot.