| Perfil de GeoffGeoff Coupe's BlogFotosBlogListas | Ayuda |
|
05/03/2005 Managing Photo Libraries: Part 2This is a followup to my previous post. I've been taking a look at some other software applications for organising libraries of photos. This time I'll write about ACDSee7, ThumbsPlus 7 and Adobe's Organizer (included as part of Photoshop Elements). First, let me state a groundrule that I have adopted: I insist that any organising software will respect any EXIF, IPTC and XMP metadata that may be stored in the image file itself. I am not interested in any image metadata being stored away in a proprietary format in the organising software itself. That way lies painting oneself into a corner down the road... However, I will accept an organiser that copies metadata from image files into its own database for performance reasons, so long as the database and the image files metadata content are kept in sync transparently (i.e. it takes no effort on my part). So, with that groundrule in mind, I can instantly reject consideration of ACDSee 7. Yes, it can read and write EXIF metadata, but does not handle either IPTC or XMP. Instead it stores keyword metadata only in its own database. Sorry, guys, but ACDSee is not for me. Next up is ThumbsPlus 7 from Cerious Software. I've actually been using ThumbsPlus 5 for years - since the days of Windows 95, when image handling by the operating system was in its infancy, and needed a boost from applications such as ThumbsPlus. Now, I quite like ThumbsPlus - it's fast and flexible, but on balance I don't think it's for me. The reasons are that the program has "grown like Topsy" over the years, and now it has so many bells and whistles that I have no use for. It's as though I can no longer see the wood for the trees. In addition, although it can read and write IPTC metadata, it does not use IPTC keywords by default, but stores user keywords in its own database. It is possible to set up synchronisation of these internal keywords and IPTC keywords. However, if you want to search on other IPTC metadata, then you need to define your own user fields in the ThumbsPlus database, and set up mapping between these and IPTC fields. While this can be done, it's not very convenient, and it means that right from the word go, I'm having to delve into an application instead of concentrate on the task at hand. In addition, it does not yet support XMP metadata at all. So, close - but no cigar. And then we come to Adobe's Organizer. First, the good thing: the editor in Photoshop Elements is excellent, so for manipulating your digital images, it is likely to have all the power that most people are looking for. But I actively hate the Organizer with a passion. I find it an appalling and clunky piece of software. Adobe should be ashamed of themselves for releasing this on to the market. And they have no excuse, it's not as though this has been their first foray into this area. It's clearly meant as Adobe's Photoshop Album on steroids - but instead they have created a Frankenstein's monster. Why don't I like it? Let me count the ways:
As you can tell, I am really not impressed with Organizer :-) So where does this leave me? No tool I've looked at so far is perfect from my perspective, but the combination of Picasa 2 (for organising and searching - it searches IPTC/XMP metadata) and PixVue (for editing image metadata) is looking to be the front runner. And both tools are free software. Picasa 2 does have bugs, and its biggest current drawback is that while it will list all folders, it will not display the folder tree. This is in keeping with Google's philosophy that folder trees are "a bad thing". However, judging by the anguished screams from Picasa users in the support forums, I suspect that Google may reconsider this. I certainly hope so. At the end of the day, it comes closest to what I'm looking for. Comentarios (8)Para agregar un comentario, inicia sesión con tu cuenta de Windows Live ID (si utilizas Hotmail, Messenger o Xbox LIVE, ya tienes una cuenta de Windows Live ID). Iniciar sesión ¿No tienes una cuenta de Windows Live ID? Regístrate
Vínculos de referenciaLa dirección URL del vínculo de referencia de esta entrada es: http://gcoupe.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!6AA39937A982345B!291.trak Weblogs que hacen referencia a esta entrada
|
|
|