It would be interesting if you perform the same experiment I did.
I uploaded pure RAW (not RAW plus JPG) files from the camera directly to iPad. Then I transferred them to my desktop using your program.
They were labeled as JPEG, but were the size of my original RAW files. Photoshop CS3 would not recognize nor open the files labeled JPEG, nor would the system
However when I changed the extension back to the original Panasonic (Lumix) extension (RW2) both the system and CS3 could read them.
Also my original files were the identical size to the transferred ones, whereas JPG files are substantially smaller.
I believe the original RAW content was transferred intact, especially given that the computer system and the photo software could not/would not read the files though they were labeled JPEG, until I changed the extension back to RW2.
I tried other RAW extensions and it did not recognize them either...only when I restored them to RW2.
Either way, it sounds like you have a remedy in the works and I look forward to the updates.
I uploaded pure RAW (not RAW plus JPG) files from the camera directly to iPad. Then I transferred them to my desktop using your program.
They were labeled as JPEG, but were the size of my original RAW files. Photoshop CS3 would not recognize nor open the files labeled JPEG, nor would the system
However when I changed the extension back to the original Panasonic (Lumix) extension (RW2) both the system and CS3 could read them.
Also my original files were the identical size to the transferred ones, whereas JPG files are substantially smaller.
I believe the original RAW content was transferred intact, especially given that the computer system and the photo software could not/would not read the files though they were labeled JPEG, until I changed the extension back to RW2.
I tried other RAW extensions and it did not recognize them either...only when I restored them to RW2.
Either way, it sounds like you have a remedy in the works and I look forward to the updates.