The original pcdMagic, which was Mac only, shipped back in February. At the time, I said there would never be a Windows version. Well, 9 months later, there is. The Windows version is a quite a bit different to what I built for the Mac, however. What I found with the Mac version was that there were two distinct groups of people using pcdMagic:
First, there were the pro photographers, the high-end "art" print shops and advanced amateurs - folks that know their photography, and are using pcdMagic because it's really the only Photo CD conversion solution available that actually gets the color reproduction right. Probably a third of the users of pcdMagic for the Mac fall into that group, judging by the organization names. These are people that can talk about ProPhoto color spaces, etc.
But there's also another group of users - folks who just want to get their images back the they remember them. These users neither know or care about color profiles, but they do know that the images as converted by the various free packages on the Web just look wrong. pcdMagic for Windows is built to make life easier for them, while still providing all the color profiles, etc in the background. So pcdMagic for Windows is built as a drag-and-drop application. All you have to do is to drag-and-drop any Photo CD file on the window, and it gets converted. Batch operations - just drag-and-drop a group of files. All the color profiles, etc, etc are done in the background. But pcdMagic for Windows is still a seriously powerful piece of software; although its a lot simpler to use than the Mac version, the only features it's missing relative to the Mac version are sharpening (easy to do later if you want), and the option to convert to DNG.
For those interested in the technicalities, pcdMagic for Windows is a C# and WPF application. Reason being that WPF brings some useful color management capabilities to the table.
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