Burning NEF or DNG files to CD

The "Export" function in Lightroom allows you to burn JPG files to CD, is there any way to burn the DNG or NEF files to CD (instead of just JPGs)?? Do you need to set up another Preset to burn DNG or NEFs? If so, does anyone know how this is done?
My reason to do this is due to my current workflow. Everything is done in Lightroom now (thank God!), but I archive my original NEF (will archive the DNG with the embedded RAW image when v1.1 comes out). I would like to burn my NEF/DNG files to CD right from Lightroom...I just can't figure it out or even know if this is possible.

Go to Export and from the pull down menu, select the JPEG Burn Preset.
Then Change Format to DNG or Original (whichever you prefer). And from the pull down menu, select Save Current Settings as New Preset.
Richard Earney
http://inside-lightroom.com

Similar Messages

  • Strange artifact in some NEF and .dng files

    Using a Nikon D80 with 4 GB Sandisk Extreme SDHC card; shooting full resolution NEF; Mac G5, Mac OS X 10.4.10, images are run through Adobe DNG Converter 4.1. Image is opened in Camera Raw 4.1 (and now 4.2) window within Photoshop CS3 Extended.
    In some photos with dark areas, there is a single, tiny, transient on-screen artifact in form of a red dot, either two or three pixels square, which always appears in the same location against, say, a dark sky or trees. It can persist or literally disappear on its own after about two seconds. If the file is reopened in the same session, the red dot may not be there at all. If the loupe tool is used, it always disappears within the loupe after about two seconds, even though it may persist in the unmagnified screen. The good news is that opening the image as a .psd in Photoshop shows no sign of this anomaly, no matter how greatly magnified.
    Note: It can also appear if I drag the NEF or .dng file over to Preview. But in this case, it does not disappear.
    Does anyone have a clue what may be causing this?
    A screen shot comparison from Camera Raw 4.1 is attached below. The left image shows the dot in place in the section of the photo and with the loupe.The right image shows the dot gone, but persistent in the unmagnified image.
    Neil

    Again, thanks, Thomas. Most, um, enlightening!  <g><br /><br />I've been shooting raw exclusively over the past six months or so. Camera Raw apparently did its job, which would explain why the pixel disappeared after a couple of seconds. I'll probably run the same image through Lightroom to see what happens.<br /><br />However, I can still see using .jpg once in awhile (family and friends snapshots destined for email or postcard-size prints).<br /><br />But then, the question begs, if other pixels are compensating for the bad pixels, does that materially affect overall resolution or appearance of the images?<br /><br />Although I've been aware of annoying "stuck" pixels on LCD monitors, I never really thought about how DSLRs deal with this.<br /><br />Neil

  • Unable to see converted NEF to DNG files in Photoshop CS

    Aloha, my laptop recently crashed and I am in the midst of trying to restore my laptop to the way it was.  I am using Photoshop CS and back in December 2009 I downloaded DNG converter.  I am using a Nikon D90, shooting in RAW.  I don't recall what I did after downloading the DNG converter but I was able to convert the NEF files to DNG by simpling clicking on the DNG icon, selecting the file and click convert and the NEF were converted to DNG files.  I was able to use my Photoshop CS with these covverted files.  In the restoration of my laptop, I loaded my Photoshop CS program and then did a search on-line for the DNG converter.  I found a 5.6 version and later a 6.3 version.  I first downloaded the 5.6 version.  I then clicked on the icon, selected the files and click convert.  I can see the NEF photos being converted.  However, when I went into my Photoshop CS program, I did not see any DNG files even though I saw the files being converted.  I downloaded the 6.3 version and got the same results.  I also went into Change Preference and selected Camera Raw 2.4 and later.  But I though I am seeing the files being converted to DNG, I do not see any of those converted photos in my Photoshop CS program.  Can anyone help me?  Am I missing a step or two?  I would appreciate y'all expertise in this matter.  Also, anyone knows how to uninstall one of these DNG converters I downloaded?  Thank you very much, Ron

    Aloha Jim,
    I went on Google and typed in DNG 6.3 converter.  The following appears:
      Product Adobe Camera Raw and DNG Converter Version 6.3 Platform Windows File
    Name DNGConverter_6_3.exe File Size 50.6MB
    Proceed to Download<http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/thankyou.jsp?ftpID=4924&fileID=4585>
    I click on the proceed to download.  The follow appears.
    Camera_Raw_6_3_updater.zip - ZIP archive, unpacked size 37,629,269 bytes
    I assume I'm supposed click on this icon that looks like three stacks of
    books and having the information next to it, Camera_Raw_6_3_updater.zip -
    ZIP archive, unpacked size 37,629,269 bytes.  After clicking on the icon, I
    come on a window that says, Camera_Raw_6_3_updater.zip - WinRAR (evaluation
    copy).  In that window there are 4 folders. The first one does not have any
    information except for 2 dots.  The second folder is labeled META -INF.  The
    third folder says, payloads and the last is like a window, rectangular in
    shape, white at the bottom 3/4 and the top portion is blue.  It is labeled
    AdobePatchInstaller.exe.  Again, I am assuming I am suppose to click this. I
    click it and then it looks like it is updating something, then a window that
    says, Adobe Application Manger comes on which says, some updates failed to
    install.  Another messages says, update is not applicable.  I don't recall
    what I did next...tried other things but I finally got the icon (circular,
    the top 1/3 white with 4 red letters, the bottom 2/3 greenish with a blue
    arrow pointing down.  It is labeled as DNGConverter_6_3.  I clicked this
    icon and get this open file - security warning window.  It states, the
    publisher could not be verified.  Are you sure you want to run this
    software.  Name: DNGConverter_6_3.exe. Publisher: Unknown Publisher; Type
    Application; From C:\Documents and Settings\(other info.  I click on the Run
    button  I then get an error message saying, Installer integrity -check has
    failed.  Common causes include incomplete download and damaged media.
    Contact the installer's author to obtain a new copy.  More information at:
    http://nsis.sf.net/NSIS_error.
    I don't know what to do.  Back in December of 2009, all I did was downloaded
    the DNG file that I found on Google, click on the DNG icon, and my NEF were
    converted so I could see it in my Photoshop CS.
    Am I doing anything wrong.  I would prefer not to invest $200 for Photoshop
    CS5 since Photoshop CS along with DNG converter were meeting my needs.  I
    know it may take some time to write this but perhaps could you write down
    the step by step process you would do from searching for the DNG converter,
    selecting the converter, downloading the converter, activate it so
    everything is set up for use with the Photoshop CS.  I would appreciate it
    very much.  It has been very frustrating and time consuming in trying to
    resolve this issue.  I thought it would be so simple setting it up like the
    first time when I first installed it.
    Thanks again for responding to this matter.  I appreciate it very much.
    Aloha

  • Do I need LR 5 in order to convert my Nikon D750 files from NEF to DNG files?

    I currently have LR 4 and the new Nikon D750. I was using the Nikon View to convert my files from NEF to TIFF and get some editing done for clients previews. I know the Camera Raw 8.7 just came out on October 2nd and I am trying to download it but it will not install on my computer as I cannot find the short cut or the installed application when I go to all my applications on my computer. I open LR 4 and cannot see it in there either. What am I doing wrong? Do I need LR 5 in order to use the new Camera Raw 8.7? I have Windows 8 so it is not an unsupported computer version as was stated on your site where you can click the download for the Camera Raw 8.7.

    Camera RAW is a Plugin that is used by PS CS, PS CC and PS Elements you cannot install it in Lightroom.
    Each Lightroom update has an equivalent of Camera Raw built into the application, it does not use the Camera Raw Plugin.
    LR 4 has the equivalent of Camera Raw version 7. e.g the latest version of LR 4.4.1 has the equivalent of Camera Raw 7.4.1.
    The present LR 5.6 has the equivalent of Camera Raw 8.6 so when a new update for LR is released version 5.7 it will have the equivalent of Camera Raw 5.7. 
    However you can download the Adobe DNG Converter 8.7 RC and it can be used to convert your D750 files to DNG and import them into LR 4.
    The converter is available at Adobe Labs.

  • I'm having troubles converting my raw files from Nikon D5200 (NEF) to DNG. I tried using Lightroom 4, but it didn't identify the folder containing the files. So i downloaded the latest DNG converter but that too didn't identify the files kept in the folde

    I'm having troubles converting my raw files from Nikon D5200 (NEF) to DNG. I tried using Lightroom 4, but it didn't identify the folder containing the files. So i downloaded the latest DNG converter but that too didn't identify the files kept in the folder location. So I downloaded DNG converter v7.3 for D5200. It identifies the folder and files; but it is giving me parsing error on trying to convert files. I'm running Windows Vista Home Edition SP1. Kindly advise. Thank you.

    I probably missed this detail in what you’ve posted, but do you see the thumbnails of the three cameras’ raw files in Finder if you don’t convert to DNG?
    What has happened in the past is that the Apple raw interpreter doesn’t read thumbnails of DNGs it doesn’t like, where at least one thing it didn’t used to like was embedded lens corrections for mirrorless cameras.  Are the Olympus and Panasonic mirrorless—meaning there is no optical viewfinder and everything is seen on an LCD screen or perhaps an electronic view finder?  If so the reason these are different is that the camera is doing the lens distortion corrections automatically and this information is stored in the raw files and in the DNGs but Apple doesn’t know how to use these embedded lens corrections or doesn’t know how to read the newer DNG spec that does allow for this information to be embedded in the DNG, at least.
    Apple could just extract the embedded jpg preview and ignore the other parts of the file it doesn’t understand, but it apparently doesn’t do this.
    What I’m not sure about is if the Apple raw interpreter still has this problem or if you’re on an older system without the latest updates for camera raw decoding by Apple.

  • Lightroom 5.7 will not convert .nef to dng from my Nikon d750. Stand alone dng converter will not recognize or convert the files.

    Lightroom 5.7 will not convert .nef to dng from my Nikon d750. Stand alone dng converter will not recognize or convert the files. Any know whats wrong?

    I don't understand why you feel you need to use ViewNX to download your images from the camera. Lightroom has an excellent import process. I don't see that you gain anything by using the Nikon software. It seems to me that it has the capability of just creating more problems.
    If you want to convert your D750 files to DNG using the standalone DNG converter thing you need to have DNG converter 8.7 installed. Once you have it installed, just choose the FOLDER in the DNG converter, but don't open it in the DNG converter file browser. If you open that folder then you will get the message that there are no files to convert. The converter works on the folder level, not the individual file level.

  • Cannot read or extract NEFs from some DNG files

    Hi, I'm hoping someone can help.
    I've got a subset of DNG files from an older shoot that have somehow become undreadable.  There are 119 bad files out of 1436 total images from the shoot. All of the bad files are in a consecutively numbered range (e.g., they are not randomly distributed).
    I'm on a 64-bit Windows 7 system. The bad files do not open in Bridge, Photoshop, CaptureOne, etc., nor will the images thumbnail in Windows Explorer using either the Adobe or Ardfry DNG codecs. I have no idea when or how the corruption occurred, whether is came about from use of a software program, or had something to do with a bad file copy operation. But my current backups are also corrupted.
    However, I always embed the original NEFs or CR2s in my DNGs, and so I was hoping to extract the originals.  However, the DNG Converter refuses to operate on these files, though they appear to be of the right size.
    Does anyone know of a way to salvage the original RAW NEFs from these damaged files?  Is anyone at Adobe looking for a little science project?  :-)  I would be grateful for any suggestions...
    Thanks very much,
    Gary

    I will attach a link to a troubleshoting document for this issue. If this does not resolve the issue you could TRY a restore to befor the issue started occurring, or a recovery MIGHT do the trick if it is not an actual hardware failure in the optical drive. The clicking concerns me that it might be a hardware issue... is it the typical clicking that you will hear when a disc is initially being read or is it a more aggressive clicking??
    There is a fix in this link http://support.microsoft.com/kb/982116 that has you go in and delete the upper and lower filters in the registry. It is a little tricky, so I suggest you follow it WORD for WORD once you are actually in the registry.
    I have seen deleting the upper and lower filters resolve most optical drive issues that were not hardware related.
    I work for HP

  • Lightroom 5 keeps changing my NEF-RAW Files to .dng files upon import

    I am currently using a Nikon D7100 and recording my photos in the Raw/NEF-RAW format.  Recently, whenever I am uploading my photos to Lightroom 5, my photos are changing to .dng files rather than staying in the NEF file.  When I go and look back at my previous imports from the past few times, they are in NEF and NOT in .dng.  Why is this doing this and how do I turn this feature off so that my files remain the same going from my camera to my computer through importation.  Thanks!
    -Andrew Gacom

    When you are importing your files, do you have the "Copy As DNG" option selected in the top-centre of your import screen?

  • Convert RAW Files in Your Aperture Database to Adobe DNG Files

    The following describes how to convert all the RAW images in your Aperture database from manufacturer formats, such as Sony's ARW and Canon's CR2, to Adobe's DNG while retaining all the Adjustments already applied to your RAW files.  In the example below I am assuming that your Aperture Library has ARW and CR2 files.  These steps work with the latest version of Aperture, being Version 3.3, and have not been tested with earlier versions (in fact, it probably will not work because the database structure changed in 3.3 - however, this means that the steps below can also be applied to your iPhoto library).  The steps are:
    1. Within Finder select the Aperture Library and Secondary Click to bring up the Shortcut Menu.  From this select "Show Package Contents"; this will open a Window showing all the files/directories contained within your Aperture Library.
    2. Drag the "Masters" folder out of the Package and place it on your Desktop.  The purpose of this step is so that Applications, such as Adobe DNG Converter, can "see" the "Masters" folder, which they cannot do if it is located within the Aperture Library Package.
    3. Run the Adobe DNG Converter, select the above "Masters" folder with the "Select Folder" button, make sure you have selected the option "Save in the Same Location", it is also a good idea to select the option "Skip source image if the destination already exists", check your Preferences then select the "Convert" button.
    4. Adobe DNG Converter will now convert all the RAW files to Adobe DNG files and save them in the same location as your existing RAW files.  Once complete, take a note of (a) the number of files converted and (b) the types of files converted, such as if the conversion includes ARW, CR2, NEF files etc.  In this example I will assume that the converter only found ARW and CR2 files; if your system is different then modify the steps below to make sure it covers all the RAW file types converted in your particular system.
    5. Select the "Masters" folder and in the Finder Window Search Field search for all the files that end in .ARW and .CR2 (this filename search list should match the types of files found by the Adobe DNG Converter in step (4)(b) above).  The number of files returned by the search must match the number of files recorded by the Adobe DNG Converter in step (4)(a) above.  Do NOT put the .DNG files in your search criteria.  Select all the files found in the search and move them to the Trash.  This will delete all the original manufacturer's RAW files from your Aperture Library leaving behind all the new DNG files.
    6. Move the "Masters" folder on your Desktop back to the root directory of the Aperture Library Package Content directory.
    7. Select the Finder Window containing the Aperture Library Package Contents.
    8. If there is a file called "ApertureData.xml" then open it with a text editor.  Search and Replace ".arw" with ".dng", ".ARW" with ".DNG", ".cr2" with ".dng" and ".CR2" with ".DNG" (note, do not use the " marks in your search).  Make sure you cover all the file types incorporated in your particular system.  Save the "ApertureData.xml" file.
    9. Traverse to the Database/apdb directory.  Select the "BigBlobs.apdb" file and open it with a Hex editor.  In this example I will use Hex Fiend by Ridiculous Fish (see http://ridiculousfish.com/hexfiend/).  Once the file is open perform a Find and Replace ensuring you are finding and replacing Text and not Hex.  In Hex Fiend this means selecting Edit/Find from the menu and then selecting the "Text" button to the top/left of the window.  In your Find/Replace field you will need to find ".arw" and replace it with ".dng", make sure you select "Replace All" (note, do not use the " marks in your search).  Do exactly the same for ".ARW" with ".DNG", ".cr2" with ".dng" and ".CR2" with ".DNG" (and whatever particular RAW files were in your system).
    10. Perform exactly the same steps in (9) for the files "History.apdb", "ImageProxies.apdb", "Library.apdb" and "Properties.apdb".
    That is it, your Aperture Library now contains DNG files instead of your original manufacturer files while still retaining all the Adjustments originally made in Aperture to those manufacturer files.  Of course, you can repeat the same step and replace your DNG files with the original RAW manufacturer files if you wish.  This process works because:
    1. Aperture does not store the Adjustments in the RAW files, it keeps these in its internal SQLite database.
    2. By using a Hex Editor you (a) don't have to play with SQLite to gain access to Aperture's data and (b) because you are replacing text that has exactly the same number of characters you are not invalidating the format of the underlying data file - this is why you use a Hex Editor instead of a simple text editor.
    Think of Aperture as being a repository that holds Adjustments which then link to the original RAW source.  Therefore, the above process simply replaces your RAW source and therefore all the Aperture Adjustments are still valid; same Adjustments, new source.  In case you ask, no, you cannot transfer Adjustments in and out of Aperture because there is no standard to transform adjustments between different photographic applications.

    A rather involved method, David.
    I am sure it works, and compliments for figuring it out, but I think one critical step is missing in your workflow: Before you begin - backup, backup, backup!
    And I think, all the edits in your database that you are doing so diligently, is what you bought Aperture for to do for you, why do it yourself?
    I convert selected raw files this way - without manually patching the Aperture Library:
    Export the originals of the raw images that I want to convert.
    Run dng-converter.
    Import the converted originals back, flag them,  and move them to the project they came from.
    Sort the project by capture date, so that identical images are show side by side.
    Then I use the Lift&Stamp tool to transfer all adjustments and tags from the original raw to the dng copy. I check, if some edits are left to do, then delete the original.
    It may take a little longer than your method, but this way all edits in the library are done by Aperture, and I am protected from accidental slips when editing the property list files. That requires a very careful work.
    Patching the database files inside the library may be justified as a last ressort, when you need to fix and recue a broken Aperture library, and none of the provided tools is working, but not as a routine operation to do batch conversion of image files. It is very error prone. One wrong entry in the library files and your Aperture Library may be unreadable.
    Regards
    Léonie

  • CS3: Bridge does not show dng-files

    First it started to refuses to show NEF files, and now, it will not show dng files - or at least some of my dng files.
    What the H.... is wrong with this crap?

    But I do not understand, why Bridge suddenly cannot see them - when it could a couple of days ago
    CS3 is known for being the worst version of Bridge with very strange behavior. Might be preferences or cache related or some other strange reason. Fact is that using old software for new digital cameras has the only advantage as being cheap. You do miss a lot of functions, options and especially quality for developing your Raw files. CS6 has a complete new Raw process version called 2012. And since you use CS3 you still will be at process 2003 and already missed process version 2010.
    So you seriously should consider buying CS6 ( you missed the option for an upgrade since this was shut down per december last year due to new upgrade policy) if you want to get the most out of your expensive new dSLR

  • System or program crashes when converting from NEF to DNG

    Hello Adobe.
    First off, I love your software.
    Second, this is my concern. You guys are pushing DNG as the go to raw format. That would be great if it worked good, but it doesn't.
    First, when I convert from my Nikon NEF format (Nikon D7100) it chugs along just fine, then suddenly crashes either the program or my system after converting 50-100 or so images.
    I have tried everything from downloading your software again, to turning off everything other then what is needed to do the conversion.
    Of course I have the latest DNG utility/plug in/drivers from your website.
    Second, the DNG images open much slower then my NEF images. Plus when I view them in Windoze file system view and want to see the photos in extra large icons, it renders the images very slowly.
    My system is Windoze 8.1 updated always, Photoshop CC latest and greatest (I'm in the rental program), Bridge and Lightroom.
    I have tried to use bridge and lightroom to do the conversion, even a separate utility and the crashing still happens. All these are up to date.
    My system has an i7 Intel processor, 16 gb of Kingston ram, an ASUS P8Z77 MPRO mother board and a good stable power supply.
    No other software crashes my system like converting from NEF to DNG.
    What I do notice is my CPU fan goes into high RPM's and I am wondering if the CPU is overheating causing this.
    If that is the case, then it would seem to me the conversion software is taxing the system far more then it should since my system is no slouch and while it isn't the latest and greatest, I would consider it to be in the top 20%,
    it should be able to handle the conversion with no problem.
    Are you aware of problems with the DNG software and or file format?
    Is their any information I could forward to you to help solve the problem?

    Photoshop Help | Digital Negative (DNG) - Adobe
    helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/digital-negative.html
    DNG is a publicly available archival format for storing camera raw files. Adobe provides Adobe DNG Converter, a free utility that converts files from more than ...
    That is off the net, therefore, Adobe looks at DNG as part of Adobe Photoshop, which it is if a person chooses to convert.
    My issue has to do with it crashing, both my system and software.
    I assume if people here are using it, then they can advise me if they are having similar problems.
    I have also written Adobe directly several times over the last month and have yet to receive a response.
    I apologize that I posted here, but since I consider DNG an integral part of Photoshop, then I think it is appropriate here.
    I was also not aware of a DNG forum, if one exists.
    Thank you for your assistance.
    Jim

  • NEF to DMG file conversion for  Nikon D810 and D800 cameras?

    How do I open a Nikon D810 .NEF file and convert to a .DMG in Photoshop CC?

    Do you mean DNG (Digital NeGative) instead of DMG?  If so, then you need a version of the camera raw plug-in that is new enough to support the D810 and then you can use the Save Image function in ACR to save a DNG.
    If your intent is to convert many NEFs to DNGs then the standalone DNG Converter program may be more efficient.
    The current version of ACR plug-in and DNGC are 8.7.1.  You can update the ACR plug-in by using Help / Updates in PS-CC (or log out and log back into the CC Desktop app) and you can get an updated DNGC from the Adobe Updates page:
    http://www.adobe.com/downloads/updates
    If you mean a Disk-iMaGe file then that’s something completely different and beyond the scope of Photoshop.

  • Why won't Lightroom 3.3 send a dng file to Photoshop CS5?

    I am using a Windows 7 64 bit platform, Lightroom 3.3, Camera Raw 6.3 and Photoshop CS5 also 64 bit.  I have my photos (from a Nikon D3100) in dng format but when I try to open it in Photoship using the Edit in command to send it either as a dng file or a smart object I get a notice that the file couldn't open because Photoshop couldn't be opened.  In fact Photoshop does open (or it is already open).  Sometimes, the file will eventually open in Photoshop, but it takes several minutes -- like 5 or more, other times it never opens.
    Can anyone offer any suggestions or help?
    P

    Quote <Is there a setting LR or on the camera that I can use to allow LR to recognise (and render) the NEF file from the camera?>
    No. LR will only show the thumbnail rendered by the camera,if it is possible. The better practice would be to download the files from the CF/SD card using a reliable card reader, this would be more efficient/faster and reliable. (use the camera to take photographs, rather than have it attached to the computer.)
    A LR generated preview will only be rendered after the import of the NEF.

  • DNG files exported from LR4 not showing changes made when opened in PSE10?

    I have LR4, and once I make some develop changes I've been exporting the files I want to use as DNG.  I then open them in PSE10 to make final edits.  It's been working fine, actually I had an older version of Adobe Raw in my PSE on my other computer.  So when I opened in PSE it would ask if I wanted to conver to compatible version to edit in camera raw.  I always said no b/c I didn't need to do anymore raw edits.  Now that I have installed PSE on my new computer, it has the new ACR version I guess.  When I open the DNGs to edit now I no longer get this error message, but it's showing my contrast, etc. as a standard raw setting instead of the changes I made in LR.  Some are showing....like vibrance, but "recovery" which I know is "highlights" in LR, and other things are not showing correctly.  I know that the options are different, but I don't want to use the ACR settings that it's using when I open the file, or have to go through them again.  I'm sure there's something I'm missing but can't figure it out.  Thanks for any help!

    I quite simply did not comment on the issue of "it is supposed to be better to keep DNG files as opposed to NEF files now, right?"
    The issue you raised in your original post, and the issue of choosing DNG versus NEF, are completely separate and independent.
    The issue of transferring photos to PSE would cause the exact same problems in your case whether or not you use DNG or NEF.
    On the issue of converting photos from NEF to DNG, there are advantages and disadvantages, some people do and some people don't. If you'd like to know more, I suggest you search this forum, there are plenty of discussions on this topic.

  • Cannot open DNG files in Camera Raw hosted by Bridge?

    I used Adobe DNG converter on a batch of NEF files (D300). The conversion was successful and the .dng files show up in Bridge with the right preview. However, when I double-click on any of these files, it launches Photoshop and opens the file in CR hosted by Photoshop. This in spite of having my preferences set to "Double Click Edits Camera Raw Settings in Bridge" in the Bridge preferences. Furthermore, a right-click (or control-click) on the file's thumbnail shows the Open With... item only has "Open with Adobe Photoshop CS3 (default)", and not the option to "Open with Camera Raw" that other RAW files have. Interestingly, if I do some editing in ACR, and click on "Done", then, right-click on the thumbnail, the missing options in the Open menu in Bridge re-appear!
    I don't think this was happening before. Is this the expected behavior, or am I missing something?
    My setup:
    Bridge 2.1.1.9
    Camera Raw 4.3.1
    My computer:
    Model Name: iMac
    Model Identifier: iMac6,1
    Processor Name: Intel Core 2 Duo
    Processor Speed: 2.16 GHz
    Number Of Processors: 1
    Total Number Of Cores: 2
    L2 Cache: 4 MB
    Memory: 2 GB
    Bus Speed: 667 MHz
    Boot ROM Version: IM61.0093.B07
    SMC Version: 1.10f3
    Regards,
    Rafael

    Problem solved. I had to delete the preferences file (resetting preferences by pressing the required keys when launching Bridge did not solve the problem).
    I am glad I learned that trick by visiting this forum!

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