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Digital Negative (DNG) is an open, lossless raw image format developed by Adobe and used for digital photography.It was launched on September 27, 2004. [1] The launch was accompanied by the first version of the DNG specification, [2] plus various products, including a free-of-charge DNG converter utility.
The commercial version also supports previewing some camera RAW formats for which a WIC-enabled codec exists. Such RAW codecs are currently available from Canon, Nikon, Olympus, Pentax, Sony and for Adobe DNG. Many applications on Mac OS X use either the Core Image or QuickTime APIs for image support.
Microsoft supplies the free Windows Camera Codec Pack for Windows XP and later versions of Microsoft Windows, to integrate raw file viewing and printing into some Microsoft Windows tools. [48] The codecs allow native viewing of raw files from a variety of specific cameras in Windows Explorer / File Explorer and Windows Live Photo Gallery ...
The following cameras allow audio and video to be shot in at least one raw (in the sense of a series of raw image format frames, such as in CineDNG) format. Lossy compression may be present. However, "raw" means the image data should not have gone through demosaicing and further processing, or at least the process should be reversible.
A high quality recreation of the blue version of the Cinema DNG logo. CinemaDNG is the result of an Adobe-led initiative to define an industry-wide open file format for digital cinema files. [1]
For example, Adobe Photoshop is a popular image editing software that only supports 8-bit HEIC and not 10-bit or 12-bit HEIC yet. [8] [as of?] Camera hardware (including mobile devices) are increasingly supporting outputting HEIC files and with color depth higher than 8-bit color. [9]
An email from WG18 stated "The Adobe DNG format was derived from this standard and the group has Adobe's permission to incorporate modifications and developments made for DNG in the new standard". [7] 2008 (May) There was further confirmation that Adobe had offered the DNG specification to ISO as part of ISO's TIFF/EP standard. [8] 2008 (September)
RawTherapee is a free and open source application for processing photographs in raw image formats such as those created by many digital cameras. [5] It comprises a subset of image editing operations specifically aimed at non-destructive post-production of raw photos and is primarily focused on improving a photographer's workflow by facilitating the handling of large numbers of images.