On Sun, Jan 17, 2010 at 4:18 AM, Louis Solomon <lo...@steelbytes.com> wrote: > have you tried removing the whole exif chunk from the jpg?
I guess that depends on whether I did it right. I used: mogrify -strip filename.jpg Does that remove just the EXIF metadata, or other stuff too? In any case, doing this did cause Photoshop to no longer recognize a color profile for this image. So I guess the color profile is only listed as part of the EXIF data after all and not embedded in the file (just like someone else mentioned already). On Sun, Jan 17, 2010 at 7:32 AM, Larry Reeve <la...@polybytes.com> wrote: > A DCF aware application sees this information and processes the image > accordingly (which means use an Adobe RGB profile). So does that mean the fault lies with the applications that use lcms, or with lcms itself? I'm not familiar with how lcms is used by applications. My understanding was that Gimp used lcms for color profile detection as well as color handling and conversion. Which part of the process needs to be DCF aware? -- Frank Gore Project Manager www.projectpontiac.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Throughout its 18-year history, RSA Conference consistently attracts the world's best and brightest in the field, creating opportunities for Conference attendees to learn about information security's most important issues through interactions with peers, luminaries and emerging and established companies. http://p.sf.net/sfu/rsaconf-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Lcms-user mailing list Lcms-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/lcms-user