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Vadim Solovyov2015-10-02 17:58:14
Adobe Illustrator
Vadim Solovyov, 2015-10-02 17:58:14

Why is the quality of the full-screen view poor in Adobe Bridge CC?

I view in ACDSee Ultimate 9 (64-bit) the quality is excellent. the same picture viewed in Adobe Bridge CC was some kind of soap. The resolution is 2000x 1136. It's not even about the resolution, this is the situation with all the pictures.

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Alexey Segodin, 2015-10-18
@VadimSoloviev

To optimize speed and time. Adobe Bridge is originally a program for managing and sorting your media files, not for viewing photo galleries.
Bridge's job is that when you press the Spacebar to view the picture in full screen, it will quickly show you the photo. For your part, you immediately note that everything is in order with this photo and you can leave it. Or you see something that doesn't suit you and dismiss the photo. At the same time, in order to make such a decision, you do not need to see the picture in all its details.
It was the answer. If you are interested in the details, read below.
As I wrote above, Bridge shows the image optimized (reduced) so that everything works quickly. Because if Bridge will render the image at full size, it will take a relatively long time. After all, 32-bit RAW photos are very large (on average, more than 5000 px in width) and weigh relatively much. And if you have 300 photos that need to be viewed, then such rendering will already be a problem.
Do an experiment:
Under certain circumstances, this time can be very long. And when you have hundreds of photos to sort, this kind of optimization in Bridge is a huge time-saver.
If you need high resolution in order to compare the details in several images in order to decide which photo to choose, then it is more convenient to use a magnifier:
You just need to click on the picture to make the magnifier appear. After clicking, Bridge will need to render the image at full size (as in the experiment above) and then it will need to wait. But comparing pictures with a magnifying glass is still more convenient.
PS By the way, I always wonder why Adobe does not optimize the viewing algorithm with a magnifying glass in any way: so that only that part of the image that is directly enlarged under the magnifying glass is rendered. Maybe it's technically difficult to do... You'll have to ask them.

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