All they have to do on the Mac is support OpenCL and it will automatically use any GPU on the system. That's what Lightroom, Photoshop, and virtually all other GPU/CPU intensive applications on macOS do. AFAIK, DPP is the only one to exclusively use ...
Here's a quick video I put together showing DPP performance on my system. Some things of note: • Files are stored locally on an SSD, and there are only 46 images in this particular folder (Canon suggests trying with 10 or fewer, but that's entirely i...
Wad, That wouldn't surprise me. Digging into the app a bit it appears to be just a port from Windows, with little in the way of Mac specific performance tuning, like using OpenCL, for example. It's a shame, because the vast majority of Canon's pro us...
Hi Vince, Here's the deal with the "use graphics processor for image processing" for Mac users. Canon's documentation is a bit weak on this, but let's start there: "To use this function, a NVIDIA CUDA (Compute Capabilty 2.0 or higher) GPU with at lea...
If you were on a Mac, I was going to suggest trying the Auto Enhance tool in Photos which can do wonders with JPEGs. However, it looks like you're on a PC and getting good results with PSE. FWIW, if you have an iOS device, there are some apps in that...