Sigi offered a better work-around using a temporary virtual copy. The feature I asked for is a selective copy/paste. Adding this wouldn’t interfere with anyone’s existing workflows.In the context of pasting, showing just the enabled settings would make sense.Īgain I’d suggest working with the tools the software offers you and think less about trying to make PhotoLab into Lightroom. While I’d love to see image synchronization implemented in PL2, I’d be happy if I could do a selective paste. Occasionally, I need to do something different (like only synchronize the sharpening and noise reductions) and the dialog is structured to make it easy to turn off everything else. The “laundry list” is pretty easy for me to use as the default items selected (in ACR for CS6, anyway) are almost always the set I want. You would normally select the adjustments to apply before you actually apply them, therefore the concept of “adjustments actively in use” makes no sense. A change to one image affects the enabled settings of all other images as you make the changes. I can’t address Lightroom or Iridient, but in Adobe Camera Raw, images are synchronized. The rest is just noise requiring decisions to be taken where there are none (i.e.the adjustments offered aren’t in use). In this kind of interface, only the adjustments actively in use should even be offered as an option. Today, the dam is a popular stop for tourists whom flock to the region for its wilderness and natural beauty, and remains an impressive engineering marvel.One issue with both Adobe Lightroom and Iridient Developer is that the list doesn’t show which of these settings/adjustments is in use. One of the most dramatic features of the dam are the two spillways with a total of four gates, which drain at a steep angle into two concrete tunnels, which emerge on the banks of the Little Tennessee River a few hundred feet downstream of the powerhouse, supplemented by an emergency spillway east of the dam. Just east of the top of the dam is the modernist Visitor Center, once linked to the powerhouse by a funicular incline railway, which is no longer in operation. The dam has a generating capacity of 238.5 megawatts, created by turbines in the modernist powerhouse at the base of the dam. ![]() The lake’s construction also led to the re-routing of North Carolina Highway 28 and the Murphy Branch of the Southern Railroad, as well as the complete inundation of North Carolina Highway 288, which was not replaced. The lake flooded several rural communities and towns on the Nantahala River, Tuckaseigee River, Hazel Creek, Forney Creek, and the Little Tennessee River, including Judson, Proctor, Bushnell, Almond, Japan, and Forney. The dam’s construction led to the formation of Fontana Lake behind the dam, with a depth of 440 feet (130 meter) and a surface elevation of 1,703 feet (520 meters), with an average depth of 135 feet (40 meters). The dam was constructed during World War II to provide electricity for industry in Tennessee for the war effort, primarily the nearby Aluminum plant in Alcoa, Tennessee. ![]() Built by the Tennessee Valley Authority on the Little Tennessee River at the site of the former site of the lumber town of Fontana between 19, Fontana Dam is a 480-foot (150 meter) tall, 2,365-foot long (720 meter) concrete structure, and is the tallest dam in the Eastern United States.
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