Rarely at 100%. Just large enough that mom can clearly see the eyes are
open and the smiles are smiling. Since these are likely all shots taken
in a studio or at least over a fairly short period of time the exposure
and focus is probably all the same or at least very similar. A
*simultaneous* view at say, 25%, is probably more than adequate.
We photogs might like a look at 100% while running through ACR but we're
not going to shock mom with a pixel view. :-)
Chuck Norcutt
On 1/23/2012 7:17 PM, Moose wrote:
> On 1/23/2012 4:05 PM, Jim Nichols wrote:
>> That seems to indicate that these programs do essentially what I
>> get in Elements 6.0. If I open a folder from a day of shooting, in
>> jpeg list format, I can select all or part of the list by holding
>> the shift key, then hit open. The selected images appear in
>> thumbnails at the bottom of the screen and as tiled images on the
>> screen. A double-click on a thumbnail brings up that image. You
>> can compare as few or as many as you like.
>>
>> Am I missing something?
>
> They folks wants to be able to zoom in on all four at once and move
> 'em around in sync. So, for example, they can see the eyes of all
> four at once at 100% and compare sharpness, crinkly lines,
> reflections, incipient blinks, etc.
>
> Synchronized Swimming Moose
>
>
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