Dxo optics pro 9.0
PhotoLab’s PhotoLibary window is effective enough for browsing your photos when you already know where to find them, but it’s not at the same level as Lightroom, Capture One or Exposure X for image cataloguing and searching.
You can find pictures according to keywords or shooting information, like lens focal length or ISO setting. folders you’ve visited in PhotoLab or added for manual indexing. You can also search for images in ‘index’ folders, i.e. You can browse folders on your computer (which is all many photographers need, admittedly) but while you can create ‘Projects’ (PhotoLab’s equivalent of ‘albums’), these are displayed in a simple linear list and are really only useful for work in progress rather than long-term organisation. The PhotoLibrary window is where you browse and organise your photos – though the organising tools are quite basic compared to those in Lightroom or Capture One, for example. The PhotoLibrary window lets you browse folders on your computer and has a basic search tool (enlarged here) for finding images by keywords or EXIF (shooting) data.
Where Optics Pro was simply a RAW processing and lens correction tool, PhotoLab adds local adjustments to become a much more powerful photo editing tool. It started out as DxO Optics Pro, but mutated into DxO PhotoLab when DxO acquired the Google Nik Collection and its local adjustment tools.