With so many more Windows users here, not sure how much interest there is in this, but in case this is helpful to anyone in the silent minority, I just completed an interesting experiment of a week of heavy Apple Aperture usage. I've been using Adobe Lightroom as my main workflow tool since the day beta 2 came out, but was disappointed with the lack of progress made in beta 3, so I thought I'd try Aperture under heavy usage. How, when there's no trial program? Bittorrent. Yeah, I know, but there's no way I was putting down any money without full usage for at least a week. So here's my impressions after that week.
Where Aperture really shines is versioning. The biggest disappointment in Lightroom B3 is the lack of versioning, which they'd been talking about for quite some time. in Aperture, just a right-click and a menu selection creates a new version, either from the original master file, or at any point along the change sequence. In addition, you can easily visually see and organize the versions using the Aperture concept of "stacks." Lightroom B3 did add a good history, like Photoshop's, but it's not versioning.
Aperture's Keywording is also quite good, with a small window that overlays everything, and you can drag and select any of a very nice set of built-in keyword categories. Lightroom is still awkward, with a panel on the left side which makes keywords a bit clumsy to adjust and delete. It will probably change a bit later.
Aperture has a nicely-designed back-up facility known as "vaults." Lightroom has no concept of backing up at all, though that will probably come eventually.
But where Lightroom really shines is where it really counts: image adjustments. Aperture is based around histograms, and you make adjustments to even out the histograms (typically). I thought I'd get used to it, but it's still a very alien concept to me. Lightroom is based around the Curves display, like Photoshop's Curves command. It's a much more natural place to be, at least to me.
Cropping and rotating are far more natural in Lightroom, with a combination tool to handle both. Sort of a resizable, rotatable window to your photo. Aperture breaks these into two tools: crop and straighten; Ne'er the twain shall meet. It is very unnatural.
Both applications are very stable. In the few months I've used Lightroom almost daily, it has never crashed. In the week that I used Aperture, it has never crashed, even with me doing fairly unusual things, like removing external hard disks that it was using in the middle of an operation, changing the multiple monitor configuration while it was running, various things.
Performance is OK for both on my 1.5GHz PowerBook G4. I'd say Lightroom feels a bit faster overall. When a photo is straightened, Aperture becomes very sluggish in all image adjustments, but you can just turn off straightening temporarily to bring the performance back. Lightroom doesn't suffer significantly from straightening.
My main concern with Lightroom, and not being part of the Lightroom team it might be an unfounded concern, but its development seems a bit scattered. It's as if they're trying to figure out a focus based on user feedback, and being a beta, focus should have been determined long ago. Makes me worry a bit about the final product and feature-creep.
But after the week, Aperture is no longer on my hard drive, and Lightroom is. Aperture's versioning and back-up method will be painful to leave, but Lightroom is more natural to use in the important things, so it stays.

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