NVidia GeForce 8 Series, ATI Radeon HD2000 Series and Intel HD Graphics 2000 Series.For HiDPI monitors, Windows 10.1607 and later.Windows 7 (64 bits) with Service Pack 1, Windows 8.1 (64 bits), or Windows 10 (64 bits and still supported by Microsoft).Intel Core 2 or AMD Athlon 64 X2 or higher.Nik Collection 3 ran fine on our 2010 MacBook Pro with 8-GB RAM and plenty of room on our SSD. System requirements don't seem to have changed. A Message Center built into the Nik Selective Tool to keep you informed about new upcoming features and access new online resources.Perspective Efex for making geometric corrections (from barrel, pincushion, fisheye distortions) to images and volume deformation corrections from wide-angle lenses.A new, multi-page TIFF image format to provide a non-destructive workflow.An updated, attractive, collapsable Nik Selective Tool to launch individual components, filter and presets in the suite. In this review, we'll look at the new features of the suite. We've been kicking the tires for a few days after a couple of briefing with DxO and our experience with the product has only confirmed our initial enthusiasm. While recent updates to version 2 have been modest if meaningful, Nik Collection 3 marks a significant update to the package. The suite was sold to Google who sold it to DxO, which has been breathing new life into it since the acquisition. Kokemohr founded Nik Multimedia in 1995 and developed the U Point technology used in Viveza and Nikon Capture. It was one of Nils Kokemohr's first inventions. We've been reporting on Nik Software since the release of Nik Sharpener, which added artificial intelligence to unsharp masking in November 2000. The Web review appeared sometime after our November 2000 newsletter review.
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