Lightroom CC is intended to work as Adobe expects us to, with our devices and using the computer as a terminal. If I’m in there doing client work, great, but if you shoot on the go, like I do, then Lightroom CC is a significant and recommended upgrade for all the reasons Adobe shared this week. I’m already subscribed to the Creative Cloud for Photoshop, and Capture One round-trips with it perfectly. That’s the reason I switched to Capture One and will continue to use it. It doesn’t matter what Adobe does under the hood to Lightroom Classic, as long as the windows are modal between Library and Develop, it’s unusable for me. For the more intensive stuff, with thousands of frames and manipulating gigs of data, it’s Capture One Pro. What you need to know is that I use Lightroom CC for my travel and creative work. Get Lightroom as part of the Creative Cloud Photography plan From a shoot last night, during which we transferred photos to our phones with WiFi. I did because it’s my job and I’ve been using a prerelease version of Lightroom CC for a couple of months-it’s great, you should totally get it, but not for old-school studio use. There’s so much going on in tech, photography and the world, in general, I won’t blame you if you haven’t noticed. Look, anyone surprised by Adobe supposedly killing the pro version of Lightroom (now named Classic) and launching a cloud version hasn’t been paying attention.
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