Please enlighten me. How does Mirage do that? How does it adapt to a new printer/ink/media combination any more efficiently than PSCC, LR, or other software applications sending source file data to destination output? Doesn't one still need to invoke a new ICC profile, new media settings, output quality settings such as uni versus bi-directional printing, printer dpi output values, etc.? If so, what is the advantage of Mirage that makes you an advocate for it's superior printing capabilities?
Easy. Download a 30 day trial and find out.
There is an Automate option out of Photoshop, but I never use it. I never print out of any application.
Essentially my workflow is to export a 16bit ProPhoto TIFF file and save it. That is my file for that image of any size, any paper, any printer.
Drag and drop it onto the application.
Dialogue box opens. Select paper size, image size, profile, rendering intent. Move around the image on the visual if necessary. Print. It just works the rest out.