![]() It should not be tolerated and I'm glad to see others on this thread think the same. The major drawback to this solution is that the resulting DNG file will be roughly double in size when compared with the original raw file. In some cases they like to screw over thier customers to increase profits (slow down of Apple Phones). Regardless of whether it makes sense or not to convert raw files to DNG, you might choose a middleground solution and embed the original raw file in a DNG file. Unfortunately larger companies like the Adobe's, microsoft's and apples of the world dont seem to care about their customers so long as their profits are healthy. Another developer, wargaming gives out software as an "Im sorry" when something screws up with their software. One developer Bohemia interactive kept their Arma 3 game in Alpha Beta for multiple years before releasing. There is a reason gaming producers have alpha and beta releases, to weed out issues BEFORE customers pay. Microsoft does it too and it shouldnt happen. Its called rushing to production before the saftware is properly beta tested and it is absolutetly unacceptable. Would you pay for a new car that isnt compatible with current fuels? Would you be pleased with paying a premium for what is supposed to be a finished good only to find out that you are the one that is testing it for the manufacturer? It isnt acceptable, this software should be compatible with existing files if the manufactures intent is for you to use their software with the top 3 or 4 current camera manufacturers. My questions are these: Will Lightroom ever be able to read NEF files without having to convert them to TIFF or DNG? Or is this something I'll just have to do as long as I'm a Nikon user? Why are NEF files not supported? Or is there actually some way to edit NEF files in Lightroom that I don't know about?Īnyone who has some advice or answers for me, please post! ![]() Luckily, I found a workaround using the image browser, Lyn, but it is a huge pain to convert all of my photos to the TIFF format before importing them into Lightroom ( I don't even know if the conversion to TIFF negatively impacts the photos in some way). The Adobe DNG Converter says it can convert any RAW file to DNG which can then be read by Lightroom, but that's not the case - the converter cannot read the NEF files from my camera. I had no idea that the RAW file format used by Nikon (NEF) would not be compatible with Lightroom, my one-and-only post-processing software. I'm a new Nikon user and I recently purchased the Nikon D7500. ![]()
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