Lux launches Halide Mark II app with revamped interface, more pro photography tools
Lux Optics has debuted a new generation of the Halide camera app with a revamped interface, support for the iPhone 12 Pro ProRAW standard, and expanded professional photography tools.

Credit: Lux Optics
Halide Mark II isn't being described as a simple app update. Instead, Lux calls it "as a whole new app" that incorporates lessons learned from the first version of Halide with technology originally developed for the Spectre app.
That includes a revamped user interface that features new gesture-based mode switchers and "reachable" controls for one-handed iPhone use. The UI has also been designed to take advantage of every pixel on an iPhone display, including the new screens on the iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro.
Halide's manual focus bar, for example, has additional controls, enhanced precision, and custom physics. A "Tactile Touch" mechanism automatically enables or disables features like exposure warnings as users adjust exposure or focus.
And along with the new design is a suite of new photography tools, including ones that leverage Apple's new ProRAW standard. Although only available on the iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone 12 Pro Max, Halide Mark II is "ProRAW ready" for the future.
Halide Mark II includes an "instant RAW" feature can instantly develop RAW files taken within an app via machine learning to get the best possible results in a short period of time. There's a new photo mode named Coverage that snaps a shot with Smart HDR and Deep Fusion, as well as an additional RAW digital negative file, so photographers have plenty of options when they're editing the file later.
Lux has also updated the Luminance and Color histograms, and introduced a third type of visualization mode called Waveform that lets users know which color channels are clipped.
One of the more prominent new features, according to the company, is a visualization tool dubbed XDR Analysis that promises to offer a full 14-bit RAW exposure and reading preview. The reviewer also gives users a full metadata read-out for image property inspection.
The app makers also announced a new pricing structure. Halide Mark II is now free-to-download and the full suite of features is available for $11.99 a year. That doesn't mean one-time pricing is leaving; Lux says users have the option to purchase it forever for $36.
Additionally, Halide Mark II is being offered for an initial promotional price of $9.99 a year, and users who nab that pricing get it forever. The developer says it expects the membership price to rise as new features are added. Existing Halide users get Halide Mark II for free, as well as a full year of member updates.
The Halide app is available to download here.

Credit: Lux Optics
Halide Mark II isn't being described as a simple app update. Instead, Lux calls it "as a whole new app" that incorporates lessons learned from the first version of Halide with technology originally developed for the Spectre app.
That includes a revamped user interface that features new gesture-based mode switchers and "reachable" controls for one-handed iPhone use. The UI has also been designed to take advantage of every pixel on an iPhone display, including the new screens on the iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro.
Halide's manual focus bar, for example, has additional controls, enhanced precision, and custom physics. A "Tactile Touch" mechanism automatically enables or disables features like exposure warnings as users adjust exposure or focus.
And along with the new design is a suite of new photography tools, including ones that leverage Apple's new ProRAW standard. Although only available on the iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone 12 Pro Max, Halide Mark II is "ProRAW ready" for the future.
Halide Mark II includes an "instant RAW" feature can instantly develop RAW files taken within an app via machine learning to get the best possible results in a short period of time. There's a new photo mode named Coverage that snaps a shot with Smart HDR and Deep Fusion, as well as an additional RAW digital negative file, so photographers have plenty of options when they're editing the file later.
Lux has also updated the Luminance and Color histograms, and introduced a third type of visualization mode called Waveform that lets users know which color channels are clipped.
One of the more prominent new features, according to the company, is a visualization tool dubbed XDR Analysis that promises to offer a full 14-bit RAW exposure and reading preview. The reviewer also gives users a full metadata read-out for image property inspection.
The app makers also announced a new pricing structure. Halide Mark II is now free-to-download and the full suite of features is available for $11.99 a year. That doesn't mean one-time pricing is leaving; Lux says users have the option to purchase it forever for $36.
Additionally, Halide Mark II is being offered for an initial promotional price of $9.99 a year, and users who nab that pricing get it forever. The developer says it expects the membership price to rise as new features are added. Existing Halide users get Halide Mark II for free, as well as a full year of member updates.
The Halide app is available to download here.
Comments
Previous owners get this update at no cost.
apple’s new RAW offers so much more, it’s a breakthrough, even though it isn’t really. RAW for may, what with all the images shot, and the processing. But RAW isn’t what it used to be from the camera companies these days either.
As for increasing the price as features get added being predatory pricing, you are kinda nuts there. Adobe Lightroom Essentials is cheaper than Lightroom Pro, and the only difference are some features. There isn't anything predatory about charging more as you add features. Nor is it predatory to add a feature that has a separate cost for it. As long as you aren't promised something for one price, then get charged anyway, it isn't predatory (or even wrong).
don’t compare it to a job. They’re getting sales all the time. Money is coming in. If the app is good, a lot of money comes in. If it’s not, then a little comes in, or stops. You forget that while ios apps are cheap, compared to desktop apps, developers sell far more of them than desktop apps.
Forget that I have the app. Most people don’t, so they won’t get the upgrade, they’ll have to pay the full $36. But it’s not the $36 that’s the problem, I dont mind that. I think a number of apps are too cheap now for what they do. I didnt mean that the initial price was predatory, I meant that the subscription is. it’s the fact that if you want to get the updates, you have to pay the $10 every year. And once you sign up for the subscription, what happens if you stop it? I’ve seen a couple of interviews, and they’ve been cagey about whether the app will function after the 12 months are up when you have the subscription. Either they haven’t decided that yet, or it won’t work, and they don’t want to say that now.
That’s what I’m concerned about.
Predatory pricing is also charging as much as you think you can, because you believe they’re no imminent completion to your product.