Can I add my voice to having super resolution functionality added to the mobile version of Lightroom (iPadOS). As someone who has clients, I'm not confident in the existing resolution that mobile Lightroom offers. Naturally, it'd easier to say 'get a desktop' (see! It wasn't hard at all) 😂 but it does seem odd that such a critical feature would not be included in the mobile version.
Has there been any response from Adobe as to whether they are considering it or when it may be included? Thanks
does anybody know what the roadmap for the iPad version looks like regarding ai denoise?
I don't understand why it's not available. The new iPads (especially pros) are so powerful and photmator has this features. I'm trying to go iPad only, but until now I used Photolab and its PrimeXD noise reduction for specific pictures.
I'm pretty sure nobody expects actual Adobe employee to answer here with specific date, but Adobe should at least deny or admit that they are/are not working on bringing these features to iPads. I find it really frustraiting that we don't know what to do.
I asked DxO about it and they were completely honest about it and said that they are not working on bringing theirs software to iPads.
What about Adobe? Will my iPad Pro with M2 chip ever gonna get these AI features? Or is Adobe waiting for Apple to run MacOS on future iPads?
I too am adding my voice to including AI Denoise to iOS mobile.
It's unconscionable that Adobe would differentiate between the two platforms making iOS users unable to utilise a tool that windows users benefit from. This in effect, creates a chasm between users depending on their choice of platform. (Or second class citizens.)
Please Adobe, support ALL of your users not just some of them and not just ones where it's easiest for you.
Yeah, not having the denoise AI is a complete dealbreaker for me as I do a lot of low light photography. I won't get an iPad until they update it with this feature.
Bonjour, je suis photographe et je travaille exclusivement sur la version IPad de LR, j'utilise un iPad Pro, aussi puissant qu'un ordinateur de bureau. Il manque une fonction trés importante a mes yeux et pour mon usage... C'est la fonction de réduction de bruit par IA. Cela fait deux ans que cette fonction existe sur LR CLASSIQUE, on attends encore cette implémentation sur la version IPad. L'IA sert deja pour la détection des visages, ainsi que pour le ciel... Rien n'empêche son utilisation sur un iPad pour corriger le bruit...
I have an iPad with an M2 chip and a Mac with an M1... guess which can do this and guess which can't... lol.
Anyways, even having them appear correctly in the library after being made on a Mac would be nice. It appears like me having 2 copies of tons of my photos if I open it on an iPad or iPhone.
Adding to this, particularly with the advent of HDR editing capability and hardware display requirements for that.
Currently, the only Apple devices that can really handle multiple stops of HDR are iPhones (at least as far back as the iPhone 12); the 12.9" iPad Pro; and the recent 14"/16" MBP. (Plus the $5k+ XDR external display.) The only way to use both Enhance and full HDR on the same device is to buy a high-end MBP, or another Mac desktop + a very pricey external display. Otherwise, to switch back and forth between devices (for me, M1 MBP for Enhance/Denoise/Super Resolution, iPhone for everything HDR beyond 1 stop).
I realize that an older iPhone in particular (or any A-chip) might have trouble handling Enhance quickly, but they are capable of AI masks and even my iPhone 12 can handle a slightly less fully featured version of the fairly processor-intensive AI Lens Blur on the fly. The current iPad Pro is arguably way more capable than my current MBP that does do Enhance, though. Basically—the most accessible XDR screens are on iPhone/iPad. Please take advantage of that, and don't require a different device (or a brand new very expensive one) to simultaneously take advantage of a pretty important feature.
I wonder if they hold back Lightroom because they have issues making some features work on the weakest devices. If so, that's a mistake I think.
For example, if denoising can't run in the weakest devices, they should included it on the devices that can run it and not on the devices that can't. I don't have numbers to back this up, but I'm imagining that those of us who are serious about editing on devices like phones and tablets use the better devices. Not the cheaper phones. I am talking about people who use mobile devices to edit on purpose when they have computers they could use. Like no one with a good computer whips out their phone to do serious editing, right? But people with a good tablet and a good PC might use the tablet, I think. Give those people all the features that can run on their device, don't let the weak devices hold everyone back. (Sorry for the rant, hope I made sense.)