![]() 10.4 (August 2021) – Duplicate Collection Sets, Nikon Tethered Live View support.10.3 (June 2021) – Native Apple M1 chip support, Super Resolution, Preset changes.10.2 (March 2021) – Performance improvements, Beta Nikon tethering support.10.1 (December 2020) – macOS Big Sur compatibility.Of course, new features have been released every few months, rather than having to wait for a single x.0 release. Adobe tend to update the main version number annually around the time of Adobe Max and this year is no exception. As Lightroom is subscription software, this isn’t a 11.0 in the conventional sense. One thing I am not sure about is what order to do things and how to re-link my photos and the catalog as I move from the detachable HD to the Photography Plan and photos on the desktop.Lightroom Classic 11.0 has been released today. Can you point me to any previous blogs/info the cover the issues involved here? Anything in particular to be worried about or focus on? I am slightly worried about all the things that can go wrong on this seismic shift. I have decided to take the leap and (a) subscribe for the monthly Photography Plan, including PS which is new for me, and want to use LR Classic which I am used to (b) move to a position where I only have my photos and LR on my desk top – so migrating both the photos and LR stuff from my detachable HD to the desk top and (c) set up a back up plan for the new approach (at present, I just copy and paste both my photos and LR catalogs to my desk top and a 2nd HD as back ups. I currently hold my photos and the LR catalogs (LR 6) on a detachable HD (non solid state) and then can switch from desktop to lap top at my convenience. If you’re not sure whether you’d be best with Lightroom Classic or Lightroom (Cloud version), there’s a feature comparison here. It’s a more recently developed program, so it doesn’t have all of Lightroom Classic’s features, but it’s easier to learn. ![]() It’s available as part of the Photography Plan subscription (only 20GB of cloud space) or as a Lightroom subscription (with 1TB of cloud space). It stores your photos in the cloud so they can be accessed from all of your devices. Lightroom (previously known as Lightroom CC) is the cloud-native family of Lightroom apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, iPadOS, Android and ChromeOS.It’s available as part of the Photography Plan subscription along with Photoshop, and it’s updated every 2-4 months. It stores your photos on your hard drive. Lightroom Classic is the latest version of that traditional folder-based Lightroom for Windows/Mac.Lightroom 6.14 was the last perpetual version, released in December 2017. It carried on working until an outside change, such as an operating system upgrade or a connection to an external web service, broke it. This means you paid a one-off fee (plus optional upgrades). Lightroom 6 and earlier stored your photos on your hard drive, and they were sold as perpetual licenses.( click to open diagram in a new tab if it’s too small) If you can’t open Lightroom right now, there are a few other clues that help to identify your Lightroom version… The easiest way to figure out which Lightroom version you’re currently using is to open Lightroom and go to Help menu > System Info. So how do you check which Lightroom version you’re using? Since Adobe rebranded Lightroom, many photographers are confused about which version they’re using.
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