As part of a school project, Campbell was using my camera over the weekend to take some pictures of the bits and pieces she had been using to make a fire extinguisher. As I do, I loaded the Nikon raw files into Adobe Photoshop Lightroom, converting to Adobe’s digital negative format at the same time. Imagine my horror when I couldn’t convert the images to jpeg.
Turns out it’s all my own fault. I upgraded as soon as a new version was released.
It seems there is a bug in the DNG converter in version 1.4 of Lightroom. Not the version for Mac, apparently, only Windows. I guess the folks at Adobe still assume that anyone doing anything arty is using a Mac.
Thankfully, rolling back to the previous release was quick, painless, and restored what had been broken. But the real issue is why did this happen in the first place? It’s a pretty obvious piece of functionality that should be well and truly embedded in the test plans by this stage. If I was someone who depended on this software for my income I would be really upset (as opposed to mildly annoyed).
I can only imagine the outcry if, say, Microsoft released an update for Office that meant you couldn’t save an Excel file once you’d loaded it.