Digital Photo Storage, Sorting and Manipulation
It seemed that for ever and a day we would always be storing our photosin obscure containers such as ice cream containers, shoe boxes, hat boxes and so the list continues...
lucky for we photographers, digital photography landed on the scene and eradicated many of these issues for us almost immediately.
Now photographers (both professional and aspiring) can store, retrieve andsort without too much trouble at all.
Of course it's true that digital cameras have never been so popular but what's important here is that many photographers have become increasingly interested in fine tuning or detailing their work even further.
While high capacity memory cards fall in price at a fast pace, their usage of course increases.
In addition, amateur photographers are storing larger and larger file sizes and they too are becoming more interested in photo manipulation which of course makes sense.
You perhaps know already of Windows Vista, which went on sale to consumers around the time of writing this article and includes an advanced photo management system that Microsoft labelled Windows Photo Gallery.
In addition, Adobe Systems, (also famous for Photoshop), released a final version of Photoshop Lightroom, a program that has been on trial for more than a year.
Remember that photo management programs are not always complete substitutes for full photo-editing software like Photoshop.
That being said, they do offer the editing tools that photographers use most frequently to change the overall look of photos, like adjustments for exposure, brightness, contrast and color.
Some programs assume that users want to fix and sort a large number of photos at the same time, for example after downloading them from a camera.
Editing software like Photoshop offers batch processing options, but the working premise of those programs is that users will generally be working on one picture at a time.
There is a technique offered by some photo management software firms which is nondestructive editing.
Through various means, the programs make sure that the original image is always left intact during editing.
As a result, the original image files kind of plays the role given to negatives in the film world.
That allows users to change their minds about edits.
Unpopular details can be cropped out of photos one day and then restored when they return to favor.
It is said, that most designers of photo management software follow Apple's option and offer two flavors of products.
IPhoto, for example, costs nothing when you buy a new Mac, while its advanced cousin, Aperture 1.
5, sells for about $300.
Most average photographers will be happy with the standard program.
However, digital S.
L.
R.
owners who frequently adjust photos or who often take photos using the RAW setting, (saves all the color and exposure data gathered by the camera's sensor in a large file) may find working with the more costly, more capable programs easier.
Here's a solution The reputation of Photoshop long ago made it the editor of choice for serious photographers.
But it could often be intimidating.
However, the new Photoshop Lightroom is simple and elegant.
One of its setup options enables photos to float on a black background, with the editing and navigation tools appearing only when the cursor is dragged near the monitor's edge.
While Lightroom, which will cost $200 for the next few months when purchased directly from Adobe (www.
adobe.
com), allows easy navigation through large numbers of photos, some of the other features need refinement.
Lightroom cannot, for example, directly attach photos to e-mail messages.
Perhaps Mac users are given a discount because iPhoto, which can easily be integrated with any version of Photoshop for high-level editing, is a much better way to manage their photos.
For Windows users, Photoshop Elements is a relatively inexpensive way to get the leading editing program and a competent photo manager in the same box.
Microsoft's interest in photo management software is not confined to Vista.
Last year, it bought iView Multimedia (www.
iview-multimedia.
com), the maker of MediaPro, a $200 program with a reputation for working quickly when searching through large numbers of photos.
The program can also store other types of data, including video and music.
This spring, MediaPro will become a new program, Microsoft Expression Media.
It will include additional features and cost $100 more.
Despite the new ownership, it will be sold in Mac and Windows versions.
About Macintosh Software IPhoto, which has been around since 2002, clearly inspired several photo management programs from other companies.
For most Apple users, nothing else is as easy to use.
Aperture, however, offers several features that may benefit people who frequently tweak their photos and who have large photo collections.
In a sense, the designers of iPhoto stuck to the shoebox school of organizing.
It is designed with the idea that all images will be stored in a single library file.
Aperture, by contrast, can track photos stored anywhere and in multiple locations, including external hard drives and those archived on CDs and DVDs.
Aperture's nondestructive editing system also consumes far less hard-drive space over time.
IPhoto preserves its originals by duplicating the full image when it is edited.
Aperture merely stores a compact set of instructions indicating how to alter the master image to recreate the edits.
If Lightroom excels in navigation, Aperture leads the way in easy-to-use editing tools.
Its only drawback is that the screen display can seem a bit crowded when on a laptop.
As with iPhoto, however, users can easily toggle to a full-screen display that hides the editing and navigation accessories.
About Windows Software Even Microsoft acknowledges that the photo features supplied with earlier Windows versions did little more than allow users to get pictures out of their cameras and into their computers.
The Windows Photo Gallery in Vista promises to improve that situation.
As a bonus, like Apple's Aperture program, it can also keep tabs on pictures that have been moved to CDs, DVDs or external hard drives.
For Windows users without Vista, one of the best options costs nothing to download: Google's Picasa (picasa.
google.
com).
Unsurprisingly, it integrates well with other Google services and it offers efficient editing tools.
While it can manage images on external hard drives, Picasa cannot deal with pictures on CDs or DVDs.
Twelve years ago, ACDSee from ACD Systems (www.
acdsee.
com) was a pioneer of photo management.
Today, the company offers a basic version of its latest software, ACDSee 9, for $40.
For an extra $90, ACDSee Pro handles RAW file conversion more quickly and allows greater customization.
Another software company, Corel (www.
corel.
com), bought Jasc Software, an early photo software developer, about two years ago.
One result of the deal is Corel Snapfire, a free photo manager, although users must put up with a small, ever-changing ad for Corel products in one corner.
It's similar to iPhoto in its basic concept and includes some relatively advanced editing functions, like the ability to straighten off-kilter snapshots.
For the benefit of complete novices, the software automatically analyzes images and suggests which ones might benefit from basic editing.
Mind you the free version has a major shortcoming: it does not offer any direct way to back up photos.
Doing that requires buying Snapfire Plus for $40, which adds a few editing features and allows users to switch off the ads.
Neither version offers nondestructive editing because Corel decided that the concept was too confusing for learners.
lucky for we photographers, digital photography landed on the scene and eradicated many of these issues for us almost immediately.
Now photographers (both professional and aspiring) can store, retrieve andsort without too much trouble at all.
Of course it's true that digital cameras have never been so popular but what's important here is that many photographers have become increasingly interested in fine tuning or detailing their work even further.
While high capacity memory cards fall in price at a fast pace, their usage of course increases.
In addition, amateur photographers are storing larger and larger file sizes and they too are becoming more interested in photo manipulation which of course makes sense.
You perhaps know already of Windows Vista, which went on sale to consumers around the time of writing this article and includes an advanced photo management system that Microsoft labelled Windows Photo Gallery.
In addition, Adobe Systems, (also famous for Photoshop), released a final version of Photoshop Lightroom, a program that has been on trial for more than a year.
Remember that photo management programs are not always complete substitutes for full photo-editing software like Photoshop.
That being said, they do offer the editing tools that photographers use most frequently to change the overall look of photos, like adjustments for exposure, brightness, contrast and color.
Some programs assume that users want to fix and sort a large number of photos at the same time, for example after downloading them from a camera.
Editing software like Photoshop offers batch processing options, but the working premise of those programs is that users will generally be working on one picture at a time.
There is a technique offered by some photo management software firms which is nondestructive editing.
Through various means, the programs make sure that the original image is always left intact during editing.
As a result, the original image files kind of plays the role given to negatives in the film world.
That allows users to change their minds about edits.
Unpopular details can be cropped out of photos one day and then restored when they return to favor.
It is said, that most designers of photo management software follow Apple's option and offer two flavors of products.
IPhoto, for example, costs nothing when you buy a new Mac, while its advanced cousin, Aperture 1.
5, sells for about $300.
Most average photographers will be happy with the standard program.
However, digital S.
L.
R.
owners who frequently adjust photos or who often take photos using the RAW setting, (saves all the color and exposure data gathered by the camera's sensor in a large file) may find working with the more costly, more capable programs easier.
Here's a solution The reputation of Photoshop long ago made it the editor of choice for serious photographers.
But it could often be intimidating.
However, the new Photoshop Lightroom is simple and elegant.
One of its setup options enables photos to float on a black background, with the editing and navigation tools appearing only when the cursor is dragged near the monitor's edge.
While Lightroom, which will cost $200 for the next few months when purchased directly from Adobe (www.
adobe.
com), allows easy navigation through large numbers of photos, some of the other features need refinement.
Lightroom cannot, for example, directly attach photos to e-mail messages.
Perhaps Mac users are given a discount because iPhoto, which can easily be integrated with any version of Photoshop for high-level editing, is a much better way to manage their photos.
For Windows users, Photoshop Elements is a relatively inexpensive way to get the leading editing program and a competent photo manager in the same box.
Microsoft's interest in photo management software is not confined to Vista.
Last year, it bought iView Multimedia (www.
iview-multimedia.
com), the maker of MediaPro, a $200 program with a reputation for working quickly when searching through large numbers of photos.
The program can also store other types of data, including video and music.
This spring, MediaPro will become a new program, Microsoft Expression Media.
It will include additional features and cost $100 more.
Despite the new ownership, it will be sold in Mac and Windows versions.
About Macintosh Software IPhoto, which has been around since 2002, clearly inspired several photo management programs from other companies.
For most Apple users, nothing else is as easy to use.
Aperture, however, offers several features that may benefit people who frequently tweak their photos and who have large photo collections.
In a sense, the designers of iPhoto stuck to the shoebox school of organizing.
It is designed with the idea that all images will be stored in a single library file.
Aperture, by contrast, can track photos stored anywhere and in multiple locations, including external hard drives and those archived on CDs and DVDs.
Aperture's nondestructive editing system also consumes far less hard-drive space over time.
IPhoto preserves its originals by duplicating the full image when it is edited.
Aperture merely stores a compact set of instructions indicating how to alter the master image to recreate the edits.
If Lightroom excels in navigation, Aperture leads the way in easy-to-use editing tools.
Its only drawback is that the screen display can seem a bit crowded when on a laptop.
As with iPhoto, however, users can easily toggle to a full-screen display that hides the editing and navigation accessories.
About Windows Software Even Microsoft acknowledges that the photo features supplied with earlier Windows versions did little more than allow users to get pictures out of their cameras and into their computers.
The Windows Photo Gallery in Vista promises to improve that situation.
As a bonus, like Apple's Aperture program, it can also keep tabs on pictures that have been moved to CDs, DVDs or external hard drives.
For Windows users without Vista, one of the best options costs nothing to download: Google's Picasa (picasa.
google.
com).
Unsurprisingly, it integrates well with other Google services and it offers efficient editing tools.
While it can manage images on external hard drives, Picasa cannot deal with pictures on CDs or DVDs.
Twelve years ago, ACDSee from ACD Systems (www.
acdsee.
com) was a pioneer of photo management.
Today, the company offers a basic version of its latest software, ACDSee 9, for $40.
For an extra $90, ACDSee Pro handles RAW file conversion more quickly and allows greater customization.
Another software company, Corel (www.
corel.
com), bought Jasc Software, an early photo software developer, about two years ago.
One result of the deal is Corel Snapfire, a free photo manager, although users must put up with a small, ever-changing ad for Corel products in one corner.
It's similar to iPhoto in its basic concept and includes some relatively advanced editing functions, like the ability to straighten off-kilter snapshots.
For the benefit of complete novices, the software automatically analyzes images and suggests which ones might benefit from basic editing.
Mind you the free version has a major shortcoming: it does not offer any direct way to back up photos.
Doing that requires buying Snapfire Plus for $40, which adds a few editing features and allows users to switch off the ads.
Neither version offers nondestructive editing because Corel decided that the concept was too confusing for learners.
Source...