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Aperture 1.5 Beyond the Basics CD
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Aperture 1.5 Beyond the Basics CD Review
Publisher: lynda.com
Retail Price: $99.95
This CD-Rom provides an easy way to watch, listen and learn about
the new features in Aperture 1.5. I learned quite a bit about 1.5's
capabilities. In fact, after being trained by Beyond the Basics, I have
been convinced by Mr. Story that I too should manage and archive my
photography all within Aperture 1.5. And that includes importing photos,
assigning keywords, organizing, correcting, fine-tuning, backing-up, and
preparing my photos for printing and distribution. I now am in the process
of revising my photo workflow to be totally Aperture-centric.
Aperture 1.5: Beyond the Basics assumes you have
a working knowledge of Aperture 1.1 or 1.2, and
uses that position as a jumping off point for exploring
the admittedly greatly improved features
of the upgraded version (Aperture 1.5 is not included,
of course). I was the perfect target market
for this disc, since I have been using the older
version of Aperture and felt comfortable with the
capabilities and architecture of the application
already as I upgraded to 1.5.
That said, I believe that photographers of any
level of expertise could utilize the training after a
few sessions of road testing Aperture's basic functions
on their own. Then it would be time to get
serious and see the breadth and depth of 1.5 from
the learned perspective of the authors by using
the CD-Rom.
A few words about lynda.com training are in order.
Obviously, the huge library of titles offered by the
company indicates that Lynda Weimann's teaching
techniques have tremendous validation from
the company's customer base, in all media variations:
CD-Roms, DVDs, online training, and of
course, printed books.
Many of the CD-Rom titles have example files
included so the student can open up tutorial files
in the application they are learning and follow the
instructor by trying the steps for themselves. The
CD-Rom I review here has no example files, but
instead the authors utilize the sample images
provided by Apple on the Aperture install disc that
is a part of the purchased application. So in effect,
the viewer can use those files to duplicate the
processes explained.
You can chose to view the tutorial movies full
screen or in a floating window. The floating window
format allows you to launch Aperture 1.5 on
the same screen as the training and jump back
and forth from tutorial to hands-on experience
within the application. I had the luxury of running
the training full screen on an iMac with simultaneous
real-world testing of the techniques by running
Aperture 1.5 on my MacBook Pro nearby - a
two-Macs-at-once approach.
Although the content is delivered in an personality-
driven style by two amiable and extremely
qualified instructors, the jury still out on one aspect:
is the friendly banter between Derrick and
Scott an asset or hindrance to getting the job done?
That job, learning the techniques of Aperture 1.5,
is accomplished by paying attention to tutorial
content, movies of menu selections, and making
note of the authors' tips.
Here's some of the goodies I have been able to
understand, learn, and implement in my use of
Aperture 1.5 through the relatively painless learning
techniques of Aperture 1.5 Beyond the Basics:
-
Workflow essentials, Aperture with or without
RAW, and even synching your Library to an iPod
-
The new way of importing images, managed and
referenced library essentials, consolidate vs. relocate,
and a workflow for laptop users
-
Creation and use of Image Previews, and integration
of Aperture with iPhoto, iLife, and iWork
-
Using improved Metadata, sidecar data, auto-fill,
and the importance of Metadata
-
New interface, RAW fine-tuning, advanced
sharpening, and new tools
-
Vastly improved Loupe features, creative uses
for the Loupe, enhanced Lift and Stamp, and
other new features
-
Output, print resolution, and extensibility (thirdparty
plug-ins)
-
Creative and productive use of Aperture using
Automator
There is one negative observation I would like to
note: In the very beginning of the training, the
movies have us stare at a lifeless interface screen
while introductory comments are voiced and procedural
setups are discussed. It would have been
nice to cutaway to the authors' discussing these
points since there was nothing to show on screen
other than a static screen shot. That may be more
a pet peeve of mine due to years of media production
where the mantra was, "no dead air."
However, once the menus start dropping down,
the boxes start checking off, and the demonstrations
of color shifting, image sharpening, and
brand new features begin, your attention is more
than captured by my now-preferred way of learning
- the friendly, self-paced, CD-Rom.
Aperture 1.5: Beyond the Basics is more than
worth the 3.5 hours total running time, as well as
worth the price. The risk factor is that you may
decide you need to totally revamp your photo
workflow and become a true Aperture devotee.
Review by NCMUG member John Hershey
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