Gonz,
I used my daughter-in-law's teacher ID to get it for $100.  A good price.
Regards,  Bob S.

On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 2:35 PM, Gonz <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks, John & Bob.  Lightroom sounds like a useful addition.  It
> sounds like an advanced version of Adobe Bridge, which came with the
> version of Photoshop I use.  Bridge is limited in its editing
> capabilities, i.e. applying the same raw settings from one image to
> another, which is useful when you have a bunch of shots with the same
> color temp for example.  Other than that, it will basically call
> photoshop or the raw converter to do anything more.
>
> On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 2:19 PM, Bob Sullivan <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Gonz,
>> I was using PS Elements 5.0 when I switched to Lightroom.
>> Lightroom functions a lot like an old light tray of slides.
>> Library and Develop are my most used modules.
>> Library creates a directory of images you have imported.
>> It lets you pull up a batch of 2 to 50+ slides on a 'light table'.
>> You can find the good ones and discard rejects easily and zoom in on
>> single images.
>> The LR 2.0 Develop module lets you crop, adjust exposure, and other basics.
>> I found the adjustments in LR 2.0 were easier and looked better than
>> in Elements 5.0.
>> I still go back to Elements 5.0 on occasion, but am cautious of the colors.
>> Regards,  Bob S.
>>
>> On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 2:02 PM, Gonz <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> Thanks John, good info.  So everyone keeps mentioning LightRoom here.
>>> Is this preferable to PhotoShop, or an orthogonal product altogether?
>>>
>>> rg
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 1:59 PM, John Francis <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> The biggest drawback with laptops is the maximum memory configuration;
>>>> apart from that they are more than good enough for most purposes.
>>>>
>>>> My work machine (a Compaq 8710w) supposedly can support 4GB memory sticks,
>>>> so in theory can support 8GB of memory.  But 4GB memory sticks are hard to
>>>> find (and 32-bit Windows won't address more than 3GB anyway), so typical
>>>> notebooks (2 DIMM slots) can often have a limit of 4GB physical RAM.
>>>>
>>>> You should be able to find a Core 2 Duo processor (speed 2.2 - 2.5 GHz)
>>>> and a dedicated graphics card (ATI or nVidia) and 500GB of had disk space
>>>> at a reasonable price; we paid roughly $700 for an HP with a 17" display
>>>> six months ago, and prices generally go down (just like camera bodies).
>>>> [We actually paid a little more than that, but that was to get a second
>>>> hard drive and Windows 7 64-bit Professional]
>>>>
>>>> The newer processors (i5, etc.) are even faster, but (of course) more
>>>> expensive.  I haven't found LR to be sluggish on my systems.  But the
>>>> memory size can be an issue, especially working with very large images
>>>> such as stitched panoramas; the I/O bandwidth from notebook drives is
>>>> not as good as you can get from a SCSI RAID array.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
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