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Aperture, really and truly, was just too slow on my G5 2.5GHz dual processor G5 with RAID and a Nvidia 6800 graphics card.
Lightroom was nice. But then I had to move my Lightroom library to another disk/computer. Catastrophe - left in tatters. I'm back to good old reliable and fast iView Media Pro 3.1 with Photoshop Camera Raw to develop the pictures.
Thanks for sharing.
It is interesting how variable the performance issues are for different users.
I have a lot of metadata - comments and ratings - from iPhoto. For the JPEGS, this data seems to be lost as far as LightRoom is concerned. Aperture can access Apples proprietary metadata file. For raw files, Aperture, and I think iPhoto 6, will export the sidecar files, so that info should be available to LightRoom.
I decided to keep iPhoto 6 for the organizing structure. Its file system is logical. Its stacks ("events") are very useful, and make it very fast to visually search. It never gives me a system busy "beach ball". Its keywording is now very powerful. It is a huge improvement over the previous version and fully worth the upgrade price. (But don't let the "new" iMovie overwrite your previous app - it is a piece of junk and should have been renamed as such.)
I find Aperture's speed to be adequate. Perhaps the GPU contributes significantly to the speed. But its tools are not as useful as LightRoom's.
LightRoom is a never-ending beach ball on my machine. The left panel of the library module is nonsensical to me. Because of its glacial speed, it was impossible to use it to organize my files, so now I just use it for its tools and flash web pages - which are great. I'll have to try it on an Intel machine - perhaps it will be useable...
As far as commitment to photography, Adobe was ready for the Nikon D3 and D300 immediately. PhotoShop and LightRoom can handle the new NEF raw files just fine. Two months after release, Mac OS X and Aperture and iPhoto are unable to deal with the raw files. This says volumes about where each companies priorities lie.
LightRoom being cross-platform might be important to some, but I live in a Windows-free world. (Though 10.5 Leopard ("Leoptard") has so many annoying and useless "features" that I might consider Windows if forced to "upgrade" to Leopard. I tried it twice and ended up banishing it from my machine.)
jc