By James Abbott
Capture One began life as a tethering solution for digital medium format cameras, and has evolved into a fully-featured software program for cataloguing images, processing raw files and of course, tethered shooting. It’s compatible with over 450 camera models, although tethered capture only supports Canon, Nikon, Sony and Phase One cameras.
If you’re unfamiliar with tethered shooting, it’s when you shoot with the camera attached to a computer via USB, and images are saved to the computer or external hard drive rather than a memory card inside the camera. When shooting tethered you have the ability to select camera settings in Capture One and fire the shutter without the need to touch the camera, while images can be reviewed on the larger computer screen rather than a small camera LCD.
A key advantage of shooting tethered are that you can review a live preview on the computer screen, enabling you to focus precisely and check exposure and sharpness. For professional photographers it also means clients can review shots as they’re taken.
Another feature here is …read more
Source:: techradar.com – PC and Mac