TUAW Review: Zooming in on Aperture 2, an introduction
With murmurings of Aperture 2 maybe, just maybe, arriving on the scene 'very soon', this morning's store down-time left one blogger hoping not for new hardware (I picked up a new Black MacBook just last weekend) but that Aperture 2 would arrive.I've been a huge, huge fan of Aperture since I picked up a MacBook Pro in January last year, leaving the then-beta Adobe Lightroom out in the cold. Ever since the launch of Leopard, Aperture has been one of the few applications I've had minor stability issues with -- and the now-resolved incompatibility with Time Machine made me choose my photos over my backups. Others were less impressed with Apple's apparent dithering on Aperture, with a number of customers venting their frustration on certain message boards. Thankfully, if the compatibility issue with Time Machine has now been resolved, and a much-updated Aperture 2 has arrived.
So what on earth is new with Aperture 2.0, and what are our first impressions here at TUAW? Read on...
User Interface
The UI in Aperture has seen a refresh, with a little more modality in both the Library management, Metadata and Adjustment panels no longer being placed either side of the main window area. Instead, we see the consolidation of the three panels into one tabbed view on the left-hand side of the application window.



Tethered shooting
Tethered shooting is a typical way of shooting in a studio. As the name implies, you hook a digital SLR up to your computer (via USB or in some cases WiFi), and as you shoot the computer receives the images from the camera. In past versions, to do this you had to rely on (in my case) Nikon Camera Control Pro and the mighty-nifty Aperture Hot Folders automator action to bring files into Aperture. With Aperture 2 however, the tethered shooting is built in, and is easily set up by plugging in the camera, choosing a project to add to, and choosing the 'Tether' option in the file menu.

.Mac Web Galleries
Just as you would create a book from a selection of files, the main drop-down menus now allow you to create .Mac Web Galleries like those made via iPhoto '08. One additional feature is the ability to share your Master RAW files via the gallery, allowing visitors to download the original images you used to create the gallery, complete with all the metadata from Aperture. Chances are you'll want to upgrade your .Mac storage limits before enabling this capability.
Background Exporting
To some people, this may be a little thing -- to me, it's a big change that I'm thrilled to see. No longer, when exporting images, is the application made inactive whilst the user waits for the export dialogue to disappear. Instead, just as thumbnail and iLife-sharing preview generation was handled in version 1.5, the exporting is all done in the background too, enabling you to get on with more work within the application during the export process.
Speed Graphic
Even though I'm without my modest library of 6500 images at the moment -- Apple has yet to put Aperture 2 on sale in the UK online store -- the speed of the application is impressive. Notably, scrolling through images (even outside of Quick Preview) and the previously-unsteady Straighten tool are hugely improved. I've got the demonstration version installed both on a top-of-the-range January 2007 MacBook Pro, and my new MacBook. On both systems the straighten tool is completely fluid and accurate, as opposed to the jittery tool in version 1.5.6. With just 50 RAW images in the entire library, it's hard to paint an accurate picture on Apple's claimed speed improvements; however, it's an impressive first pass.
Anything else?
There are touted to be over a hundred new features in Aperture 2. The updated version has also been reduced in price -- a full licence now costs US $199 (£129), less than half the original $499 list price Aperture 1.0 went for, with an upgrade from v1.x costing $99 (£65). That's $100 less than Adobe Lightroom, and it will be interesting to see whether Adobe chooses to compete on price with the new version of Aperture.
Tomorrow we'll throw a full library upgrade at Aperture 2, check out the performance further and explore some of the new features in more detail.
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Source: http://apple.com/aperture
With murmurings of Aperture 2 maybe, just maybe, arriving on the scene 'very soon', this morning's store down-time left one blogger hoping...
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Any chance to share the same Aperture library on a mac with another mac ?
I'd like to access via wifi to another Mac and access and modify the same unique library.
Is it possible ?
Thanks
You can change the location of the library on your macbook to access the library on your mac....it works but it is very very very slow. I'm not sure how much faster it would be with the new version.
February 14 2008 at 1:57 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyIn the UK the education upgrade price is £65 (same as non-education users) but the retail price education is only £55!
February 13 2008 at 10:30 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyWell, speed improvements are great, my 15k picture library(3-10mpx pictures & some raws) is blazing fast, smart folders are fast and i don't need to make additional projects because of 10k picture limit per project.
I live only on keywords and smart folders, all pictures are in one place now :)
At least my frustration is over for aperture being slow for years.
Thanks Apple.
Holy poop batman - it has editing plugins!
http://apertureprofessional.com/showthread.php?t=11851
I downloaded the trial today, and have been playing with it. I'm working out of town, so I only had a smaller 3.5GB, 2600 image library with me that was in iPhoto '08. I'm on a 2.33 GHz MBP (pre-SR) w/ 3GB RAM and 120GB 5400rpm drive.
Let me tell you, Aperture 2 screams compared to 1.5. And definately faster than iPhoto '08. It took Ap2 about 40 minutes or so to finish building everything it wanted, but even during that time it was building the speed was very quick.
I get home Friday and have a 200GB 7200rpm drive waiting for me, as well as an eSATA card for my external drives. I'll test ap2 on my larger 18GB, 16000 image library before I upgrade the hdd, but between Ap2 and the new hard drive, I think this thing is gonna just freaking rock. I'm super excited.
Hmm, I've tried Aperture with only about 40 images. It sure was pretty fast! But boy, Icons, Tabs and so on are just so small on a 24" iMac. It's very responsive, snappy and fast, awesome. But I think it takes longer to learn than Lightroom. Currently I'm used to the Lightroom controls, switching seems kind of hard, if you've never used Aperture before.
February 13 2008 at 2:24 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyArgh. Restoring the Vault didn't work - "Okay, restore completed, need to relaunch..." Relaunch, "Create a new library or quit". I understand why they made it so that it didn't default to importing your existing library, but...guys, make it possible to import it to try things out if people want to?
February 13 2008 at 1:09 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyDid you try highlighting your projects in 1.5 and selecting file --> export projects and then going into 2 and selecting file --> import projects?
February 13 2008 at 6:18 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyI just got off the phone with apple, if you purchased 1.5 after jan 1st - I personally purchased 1.5 at a closing compusa for $209 - ap2 is 9 bucks.
Theres a very, very tiny bit of text at the bottom of the apple store ap2 page, right above the comments on the right. You know they tried damn hard to make that little bit of helpful info as obscure as possible.
I'm currently testing bringing my full library in by restoring from my Vault. Seems to work so far. (I was still in trial mode on 1.5, due to just recently getting a machine capable of running it, and was waiting for 2.0 to buy it.)
February 12 2008 at 10:54 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyI use both Aperture and Lightroom. I like Aperture but I feel that the workflow and UI is not as transparent and user centric as Lightroom. My belief in the Lightroom approach forces me to wait and see....if Adobe adds some more features, I will spend my $100 with them over Aperture.
February 12 2008 at 10:22 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyHot Apps on TUAW
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