![]() There are still questions about Toki’s health and her ability to travel across the country to a sea pen. The tribe, who views killer whales as part of their extended family, have never stopped fighting for her release. Back home, the native Lummi people call her Sk’aliCh’elh-tenaut – meaning that she is a member of Sk’aliCh’elh, the resident family of orcas who call the Salish Sea home. One of those calves was four-year-old Tokitae. At least a dozen of those whales died during the capture, and more than 50 were kept for captive display. Men with long sticks and guns corralled a group of resident killer whales, separating mothers from their calves. Tokitae’s ordeal began in the calm waters of Penn Cove, Whidbey Island – a quiet island off the coast of Washington State – five decades ago. She’s lived this long to have this opportunity.” “I know she wants to get to free waters,” Irsay said at a news conference Thursday in Miami. Photograph: Jeff Greenberg/Universal Images Group/Getty ImagesĪ “generous contribution” from Jim Irsay, owner of the NFL’s Indianapolis Colts, helped alleviate the financial questions around Toki’s future. The same is true in Nikon NX Studio - only hint that the file is HE* or HE is the file size.The audience at the Miami Seaquarium watching Lolita at its 40th anniversary performance. The only way one can tell is by looking at the file size in Finder. But they are, of course, visible in Capture One in the file browser.ĮDIT: When I look at the metadata for the HE* files in Capture One, there is no indication that the file is HE* or HE versus Lossless Compressed. I cannot see the Z9 thumbnails (lossless compressed or HE) in Finder. Side Note: My system is a MacBook Pro M1 running Monterey 12.6. 22 instead of making me pay for an upgrade later this fall to CP-1 Ver. Really pleased (and somewhat surprised) that Capture One included this update in CP-1 ver. Images were recorded on a Delkin XQD card. I'll try some shots later at higher ISOs closer to sunset. Now my aging eyes are not that in tune to looking for minor differences in the images, e.g., dynamic range or whatever. The test shots were all at ISO 64 no exposure compensation. NEF Files sizes dropped from Lossless Compressed at an average of 55mb each to an average of the mid 30's mb for HE*. HE* files handle normally everything looks fine. Just updated to Capture One 15.4.1 and shot and imported a couple dozen Z9 HE* files. I use Delkin Black CFexpress b and process on an Apple M1Max Studio with 27" studio display and keep my images and LRC catalog on a OWC Envoy Pro SX w/thunderbolt OWCTB3ENVPSX04 4TB and back up with carbon copy cloner to 3 other external SSD drives. I have switched for the last 3 shoots to HE* since I prefer the smaller file storage size. Like I have still used lossless compressed most of the time until the last few weeks. ![]() So far I can not tell any difference between the lossless compressed and HE*. I shoot a lot of birds for ID in a wide range of lighting conditions and ISO from 64 to 2500 and rarely up to 8 to 10,000. I primarily use Camera Standard with settings adjusted in it on my Z9. I use Photo Mechanic 6 for initial culling, Light Room Classic (LRC) with Topaz plug ins and have my LRC presets Global set to Camera Settings. I have no need for tethering so no experience with that. Pro wildlife photographers like and pro portrait photographers like Matt Granger have reported that they see no useful difference between HE* and Lossless compressed raw. I'll just have to learn by experimentation like many of us. Late Edit: As I often find myself in situations where low light is such that my ISOs get a bit high, how HE* will affect shadow recovery issues in post processing is something that I'll have to experiment with once HE NEF support becomes part of Capture One. Important in the sense that I would not feel the need to buy very large capacity memory cards which are exorbitantly expensive. I would not otherwise pay to upgrade from CP 22 to 23 except that HE support and the smaller Z9 NEF files is important enough to me that I’ll likely bite the bullet and pay up for CP 23. That said, CP-1 will likely only provide support in their next major release (23) which means you’ll almost certainly have to pay to upgrade to be able to use HE NEFs. So I suspect we will see HE support for Capture One and others soon. Click to expand.Sounds like the developer of the HE technology (which is based on the TicoRAW format from a company called IntoPix) has developed the SDK’s (Software Development Kits) to send to these various software companies.
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