Vertical lines in preview and conversion
conversions of my D80 files show strong vetical line even spaced over the whole picture & a lighter part on the left hand side. the lines are present in the preview as well as the conversion.
Any ideas?
Nikon D 80
Capture one 4.1
Nikon D 80 generic profil to Adobe RGB
WinXP SP2
AMD Athlon XP 2800+
1 GB RAM
Any ideas?
Nikon D 80
Capture one 4.1
Nikon D 80 generic profil to Adobe RGB
WinXP SP2
AMD Athlon XP 2800+
1 GB RAM
0
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Uninstall Adobe CMM and the lines will go away. 0 -
problem solved!
thanks for the prompt reply!
cheers
M0 -
I am facing the same problem with the vertical lines showing up in all images, but removal of the Adobe CMM is not a solution for me.
I am using a kind of RIP called Mirage for printing with my Epson printer. After I had deleted Adobe CMM the Mirage RIP didn't work anymore.
Is there any other solution?
(I'm using Windows XP Prof., SP3, Capture One 4.6.1, Photoshop ..., ICC profile Adobe RGB 1998)
Any help would be very much appreciated.0 -
I also need Adobe CM. And C1 works on my comp. But only with some output profiles. 🙄
Anyhow - I do not see big need to use anything else but "embed camera profile" 😁
This is rather old error, which does not seem to bother PhaseOne a lot. 😕0 -
@Sylvia4 and Vito,
It is obvious CO4 and 5 don't not like Adobe CMM. Instead of discussing who is wrong, let's try to draw the bigger picture for a change. Conflicting applications are as old as computers. Regarding the conflict at hand, I suspect it is a DLL (dynamic link library) conflict which comes with the nature of Windows. Both apps can have a clean bill of health but conflict. Period.
Sometimes the conflict affects updates like a Service Pack. One app needs it, the other can't work with it. Result: you're in a dead-end street. 🤬
The single solution is to run conflicting applications on separate computers. This is typically common for printing and scanning which require often a close match of software versions.
If you don't have extra hardware available (often your older PC will do) or don't want to invest into it, a virtual machine might be the best way out. Desktop virtualization, in which you run a separate computer on top of your physical machine, is perhaps not something you are familiar with. Virtualization software is cheap or free (from Microsoft among others) and the main requirement is that you can connect to your peripheral hardware through USB or network (firewire is not virtualized).
Virtualization: something to consider.0
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