Slick well organized interface The interface is very slick and iPhoto features tons of tools to help you manage your library. In fact, the real strength of the program resides in the organizing options such as organizing by events, create a gallery, print out calendars and books etc. In particular, the unified search function allows you to quickly find any photo based on all sorts of criteria like date, name or keywords and now, even faces. Well integrated with other Apple apps Of course, iPhoto is also very well integrated into other Apple apps such as iDVD so your iPhoto images can easily be used in videos that you're editing. Displaying photos in full screen mode isn't as simple as it should be however - it involved way too many clicks and its hard to get rid of the toolbar.
I've been using Sierra for a while. And continuing to use iPhoto, which I much prefer to Photos. (I know Apple doesn't support iPhoto anymore). I just got a new camera, a Panasonic G85. Mallard duck sounds.
I tried to import raw files into iPhoto, but they weren't recognized. Found I needed to upgraded to High Sierra to get the raw support. IPhoto still won't recognize the raw files. I can see thumbnails of the images as the import starts, but then I get the message the files are not recognized. Same with Image Capture. I can see thumbnails but won't import into iPhoto. The raws import into Photos okay.
And iPhoto continues to work as before with older cameras. In the past, an OS update has allowed me to use newer cameras with iPhoto. Anyone else having a similar problem?
ICloud Photos gives you access to your entire Mac photo and video library from all your devices. If you shoot a snapshot, slo-mo, or selfie on your iPhone, it’s automatically added to iCloud Photos — so it appears on your Mac, your iOS devices, Apple TV, iCloud.com, and your PC.