MacOS Catalina 10.15 has brought major changes to Mac computers. Certainly, one of the most effective is that no longer using 32-bit programs. Some Apple apps were affected by a clear shift of 64 pieces, such as Aperture, the company's photo editing suite was replaced, in a way, with photos.
Although Apple stopped developing Aperture in 2015, MacOS Catalina is still in use, so it could be a tool for the work of users who haven't offered other programs like Adobe Lightroom. A few months ago at Applesfera we talked about Retroactive, which made Aperture compatible with the latest version of the operating system. But now developed another software that allows you to customize your image library with Adobe Lightroom: Avalanche
Uses AI to save changes to images
The way the Avalanche works is curious. Use machine learning to run the reverse engineer in the edition of our photos, and then do everything possible to re-install the changes in Lightroom. In addition, we don't have to have Aperture installed on Mac to work.
There is no way to make a complete migration between Aperture and Lightroom. Although it can be "easy" to transfer metadata and albums, image editing in RAW does not, because the programs do not use the same processes or transformation algorithms.
CYME, the development team behind the Avalanche, trained the app with a large number of pictures edited in Aperture and Adobe Lightroom
The Avalanche is not free. The license is available for $ 59, although there is a free trial. If you are interested in moving from Aperture to other software such as Adobe Lightroom, Avalanche is a great option.
Via | The cult of Mac