Mar 28 2026 APP 2.0.0-beta40 will be released in 7 days.
It did take a long time to have the work finished on this and it will have a major performance boost of 30-50% over 2.0.0-beta39 from calibration to integration. We extensively optimized many critical parts of APP. All has been tested to guarantee correct optimizations. Drizzle and image resampling is much faster for instance, those modules have been completely rewritten. Much less memory usage. LNC 2.0 will be released which works much better and faster than LNC in it's current state. And more, all will be added to the release notes in the coming weeks...
Update on the 2.0.0 release & the full manual
We are getting close to the 2.0.0 stable release and the full manual. The manual will soon become available on the website and also in PDF format. Both versions will be identical and once released, will start to follow the APP release cycle and thus will stay up-to-date to the latest APP version.
Once 2.0.0 is released, the price for APP will increase. Owner's license holders will not need to pay an upgrade fee to use 2.0.0, neither do Renter's license holders.
Have you tried running a stack without any calibration files to see if the artifacts remain?
I have seen an effect similar to this in the past. But, as I recollect it occurred only when I used the light correction tool on an image that had already been light pollution corrected. Basically the effect is called posterisation.
When APP runs the LPC tool it produces a color correction model that attempts to flatten out the color gradients in the source image. Assuming selection boxes are well placed the tool provides an excellent (but inevitably somewhat imperfect) result.
When the process is repeated, the selection boxes will be placed somewhat differently and the tool will produce a revised color correction model that attempts to flatten out these minor residual variations. Inevitably however there will still be minor residual color variations in the darkest areas.
The posterisation problem occurs when APP is asked to display the highly-flattened 32 bit resolution image produced by the LPC tool, highly stretched, on a computer monitor only capable of displaying color at much lower resolution. The result is the very minor residual color gradients in 32 bit resolution image start to show as steps at the lower resolution of a color image.
So basically I think nothing is really wrong with your image.
Mike
