Lightroom vs Bridge

Someone please tell me the core difference between lightroom and bridge.
Also, when I export a photo from lightroom to photoshop it cannot be opened in the raw converter in bridge. Why is this?

If you want to use Bridge, the thing to do is, after whatever edits you do in LR, tell LR to save the metadata to a file (in the Library module's Metadata menu). Then you can point Bridge at the file and Bridge can "see" the LR edits. You can open the file in Camera Raw, and ACR will apply the values from the LR xmp file, because the ACR engine is the same as LR's Develop module. That is, if you have ACR version 4.1 installed. If you don't see all the controls in ACR that you see in LR's Develop module you might not have an up-to-date version of ACR. You can download an up-to-date version of Camera Raw from Adobe for free.
If you prefer to use DNG it works just the same except that from what I see Bridge doesn't render a preview of the DNG so you won't see the image.
When you send a RAW file to PS from LR, LR saves as either a tiff or a psd file because PS needs an
image, not a RAW or DNG file. Bridge and Camera Raw have a seamless way of just handing things off without saving an image file first, but still Camera Raw renders an image to pass off to PS, you just save it in PS. Some of us have asked for a "don't save the file first" function in LR, but Adobe has to enable that within PS before LR can do that.
I hope all that helps some!
Tony

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    T.N. Turner, www.TheArtfulToad.com
    Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2011 16:19:10 -0700
    From: [email protected]
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: Does Lightroom make Bridge obsolete?
        Re: Does Lightroom make Bridge obsolete?
        created by web-weaver in Photoshop Lightroom - View the full discussion
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