ViewPoint's standalone application window has the simple, pleasing dark gray user interface found in up-to-date photo applications. ViewPoint also can correct more straightforward perspective problems, for example, if you're pointing the camera up at a building and want the shot to look straight on. The correct form of the originally 3D subject is changed and not usually in a pleasing way! ViewPoint corrects it. It describes what happens to, for example, a head at the side of a wide-angle shot that looks stretched. The major issue that ViewPoint solves is volume anamorphosis, though the company has moved to the slightly less head-scratching term volume deformation. We've reviewed the company’s impressive DxO PhotoLab, which can pull photo information from a raw camera file and automatically tune an image based on your lens and sensor characteristics, as well as PureRAW, which does an amazing job at image noise correction. One installation process installs it both as plug-ins and the standalone application. When you install ViewPoint with custom settings, you can choose to install plug-ins for Photoshop, Photoshop Elements, and Lightroom Classic, as well as for DxO PhotoLab. At nearly a gigabyte, it's not the smallest program to download and install. I tried the standalone version of DxO ViewPoint on a 3.4GHz Core i7 Windows 10 test machine with an Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 graphics processor.
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