![]() In-app updating shows download progress in the title bar and no longer closes the app automatically when it’s complete.Added tooltip when there are no faces in the subject due to no subject being selected.Added preference to enable “hot pixel” removal for RAW images.Added preference to have Autopilot never turn on any filters automatically.Re-designed Preferences panel to be easier to navigate.If there’s a specific image you’d like us to see, you can send it us at this dropbox link. We’ll be updating TPAI regularly to address those pieces of feedback and issue reports. Please give us any feedback or report issues with this release. ![]() We’ve also added an opt-in feature for uploading images to improve Topaz Photo AI models which can be enabled/disabled on a per-batch basis. Besides that we have a lot of other fixes around the app that include improved performance during exporting as well as more informative dialog, tooltip and error messages. Thank you for supporting small, indie developers like ourselves! We’re working on native support for Apple Silicon, but we have another update for you until then.Ĭompatibility: macOS 10.This week we’ve redesigned the preferences panel and added a few new preferences that should enhance your workflow. HyperScan and the excellent Atkinson dithering routine were subsequently unavailable for many years-but not forgotten!įrom Tinrocket, award-winning creator of apps to inspire creativity: Waterlogue, This by Tinrocket, and Olli by Tinrocket. Later, this graphics routine was implemented as an option in Apple’s HyperScan software, connecting early Macs to flatbed scanners, and nowhere else. In the early 1980s, while developing the graphics technology for the first Macintosh, Bill Atkinson (HyperCard, QuickDraw, MacPaint) discovered a very elegant filter to convert greyscale image data for display on the Mac’s 1-bit black-and-white screen. ![]() The visual effect produced by this technique creates rich, velvety tones, and is higher-quality than the “Diffusion Dither” method offered by Photoshop. HyperDither uses an elegant color reduction (dithering) routine to turn color or grayscale images into black and white or grayscales. ![]()
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