In digital photography, the Digital Negative (DNG) file format is a royalty free RAW image format designed by Adobe Systems. Its specification was announced on September 27, 2004.[1] The same day, Adobe introduced Digital Negative to the market with its free Adobe DNG Converter program. According to Adobe, Digital Negative was a response to demand for a unifying camera raw file format.[2] Digital Negative is based on the TIFF/EP format, and mandates use of metadata. All Adobe photo manipulation software (such as Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Lightroom) released since the announcement support DNG. Adobe is submitting DNG to ISO for standardization.[3]
Digital camerasThe following digital cameras support DNG, as of March 2008.[4]
Software that supports DNGBesides Adobe Photoshop, several other software programs provide read support, and sometimes write support, for DNG files including: Adobe Lightroom, FuturixImager, The GIMP, ImageMagick, ACDSee Photo Manager, ExifTool, Aperture.[14] As of January 29, 2007, Hamrick's VueScan application for Mac OS X & Windows, beginning with version 8.4.05, adds support for writing DNG files from a flatbed or film scanner, as well as reading it from suitable digital cameras. Adobe DNG Converter was published by Adobe Systems on September 27, 2004. It converts different camera raw format files into the Digital Negative (DNG) standard. It also supports lossless data compression when converting. The program is free of charge, but not open source. It can be downloaded at Adobe's site (Win and Mac). See alsoReferences
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