Show Focus Points
2019 update released! Check out download page for details
Show Focus Points is a plugin for Adobe Lightroom. It shows you which focus points were selected by your camera when the photo was taken.
Show Focus Points is a plugin for Adobe Lightroom which shows you which of your camera's focus points were used when you took a picture.
Below find some screenshots of the plugin in action.
Click on the images to enlarge them.
Download Mac-only version (6.6 MB)
Download Windows-only version (14 MB)
Download version containing both Mac+Windows versions (20 MB)
PSP homebrew repacks refer to re-packaged versions of homebrew applications, games, or demos created by the community, which are then made available on Archive.org. These repacks typically contain a collection of homebrew software, often with a specific theme or focus, such as games, utilities, or multimedia applications.
To the uninitiated, the phrase reads like a password from a cyberpunk novel. But to the dedicated community of PlayStation Portable enthusiasts, it represents a vital, albeit legally ambiguous, lifeline to a console that Sony abandoned nearly a decade ago.
It was a key.
Community reactions
Kaelen watched the mesh grow. She saw scientific papers reappear: mRNA vaccine blueprints, desalination techniques, soil remediation guides. She saw old forum threads, preserved like flies in amber: “How to fix a PSP’s stuck pixel,” “Best homebrew NES emulator settings,” “FLAC vs MP3 on 333MHz CPU.” And buried in the metadata—the real payload: a fully decentralized publishing protocol called “Gutenberg 2.0.”
“Keep this safe,” she said. “If someone asks for a PSP homebrew repack, you’ll know what to do.”
PSP homebrew repacks refer to re-packaged versions of homebrew applications, games, or demos created by the community, which are then made available on Archive.org. These repacks typically contain a collection of homebrew software, often with a specific theme or focus, such as games, utilities, or multimedia applications.
To the uninitiated, the phrase reads like a password from a cyberpunk novel. But to the dedicated community of PlayStation Portable enthusiasts, it represents a vital, albeit legally ambiguous, lifeline to a console that Sony abandoned nearly a decade ago.
It was a key.
Community reactions
Kaelen watched the mesh grow. She saw scientific papers reappear: mRNA vaccine blueprints, desalination techniques, soil remediation guides. She saw old forum threads, preserved like flies in amber: “How to fix a PSP’s stuck pixel,” “Best homebrew NES emulator settings,” “FLAC vs MP3 on 333MHz CPU.” And buried in the metadata—the real payload: a fully decentralized publishing protocol called “Gutenberg 2.0.”
“Keep this safe,” she said. “If someone asks for a PSP homebrew repack, you’ll know what to do.”