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Thursday
Jun212007

Organize your digital photos with Picasa

Organize your digital photos with Picasa

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Technophilia: Organize your digital photos with Picasa - Lifehacker

 

Anyone with a digital camera knows it doesn’t take much to wind up with a hard drive littered with thousands of files named things like IMG_1892.jpg. In my quest to organize all the stuff that’s accumulated on my hard drive, I knew that sooner or later, my little digital photo problem would rear its ugly head. By “little”, I mean out of control, and by “problem”, I mean looming catastrophe. What’s a girl with literally thousands of pics to organize on her ‘puter to do? Enter Google’s free desktop software, Picasa, which is basically the Walker Texas Ranger of photo organization packages.

Intro to Picasa
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Because I have three kids who are photographed pretty much every day, I have a lot of pics. Add that to the various web sites that I blog for and you have a ton of images. I’ve attempted to keep them in some kind of meaningful order over the years, and it’s not TOO horribly bad, but I knew it could be better. That’s where Picasa came in and saved my bacon.

PIcasa is a free download for Windows and a Linux version is available over at Google Labs. (Sorry, Mac users - there’s a Picasa Web Albums uploader available for you, but not a full-blown version of the software.) Once you download Picasa (free!) and install it, Picasa will set to work finding and organizing all the pics and videos on your machine by date added. Depending on how many pictures you have, this process can take a while to complete. In fact, if you do have a ton of pictures, you can pick and choose which folders you’d like Picasa to scan to save time.

Here’s what Picasa’s interface looked like once it got done indexing all my pics.

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On the left are all the folders that contain photos that Picasa found on my machine; this list is sorted by creation date by default, but you can change it by selecting “View”, then “Folder View”. I prefer “Sort By Name”.

On the bottom, you’ll see what Picasa calls the Photo Tray; basically, this is the workstation section of Picasa, where photos can be edited, blogged, printed, ordered, etc.

Lastly, the middle section where you can actually *see* the photos is called the Lightbox; this just displays the images inside the folder list on the left-hand side.

Organization

Before you get going too far in Picasa, it’s worth noting that any changes you make to folders within Picasa will affect your machine’s filesystem.

Once Picasa finished scanning my computer for images, I had all my thousands of photos in one convenient place. There were three main organizational hurdles that I needed to tackle:

  • Renaming.
  • Organization of folders
  • A more meaningful sorting system
Renaming
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I found approximately 4 jillion pictures that were not intuitively labeled using Picasa, and the thought of having to go through and rename those individually kind of made me queasy. However, you can use Picasa to rename an entire group of photos at once:

  • Find the folder where the photos are located.
  • Pick the photos you want to rename; you can use the Shift key to select multiple photos in the Lightbox.
  • Select “File”, then “Rename” (you can also access this by just pressing F2).
  • Figure out what you would like this group of photos to be named.
  • Click “Rename”, and you’re all set.

Now, instead of five photos labeled ever so helpfully “0784586.jpg” (and so on), I’ve got five photos labeled “Valentines Day 2003”.

Organization of images within folders

There’s not one way to organize images within folders that’s going to work for everyone; I know that what works for me might not necessarily work for you, and that’s okay. The method that works best for me seems to be a combination of dates and events, so that’s how I set out to organize my folders in Picasa. A couple of things that I found most helpful to keep in mind when I organized my folders:

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  • The folders come by default with a date attribute which is completely separate from the name attribute.
  • When you start to get a lot of folders, you have a couple of views to choose from - I find Tree View (click on View, Folder View, Tree View) easier to manage.
  • Once you’ve copied or moved images around in folders within Picasa, do NOT tweak with them in Windows Explorer. I actually lost edits that I had made to two folders doing this.

Organizing my folders is an ongoing project - I’ve got thousands of pics to get sorted, but Picasa makes it simple to drag and drag and drop an image from one folder to another, rename on the fly, even apply captions if I want to.

A more meaningful sorting system

Once I started making sense of my misnamed images and half-sorted folders, PIcasa gave me even more micro-organizational options: albums and gold stars.

First, gold stars. While you’re organizing your photos, you’re sure to come across an image you want to make sure you can find easily later. Just click on the star button in the Photo Tray and that photo will be starred; you can later select all the starred photos in one folder to add to another folder or an album (what’s an album? Keep reading.). Oh, and if you’d like to apply stars to more than one photo at once, just click on the Shift key and go to town.

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Think of Picasa albums like this: you’ve got 234 snaps from your Oregon coast vacation. You can instantly access your favorite images by selecting them from their appropriately named folder (or clicking on the “Select Starred” option) and dropping them into an album - you could call it “Oregon Coast Highlights”. It’s an easy way to instantly pull up the images you want to share with Grandma.

I could keep going, but I’m out of space. Believe me, there’s a lot more I could’ve written here on the ninja-like way Picasa helped me organize my photo collection; it’s just that awesome. Tune in next week, when I’ll show you how I use Picasa to edit and adjust photos.

Wednesday
Jun202007

FindSounds: a search engine for sounds

FindSoundsFindSounds is a website that helps you… are you ready for this?  Find sounds. We know, it’s shocking that someone would give a web service a useful and descriptive name, but there you go.
Say you want to find the sound of a jackhammer, or a forest. Just visit FindSounds, type your query into a search box, and you’re whisked away to a page of matching results. Click on the sound icon next to each result to hear or download the file.
You can refine your search by limiting it to WAV, AU, or AIFF files. You can also search for stereo or mono files, or set sample rate or resolution requirements. The largest files you can search for are up to 2MB, so don’t expect to find musical recordings here. This is strictly for sound effects.

FindSounds: a search engine for sounds - Download Squad

Friday
Jun152007

Photo Sharing Even the Folks Can Handle

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FLICKR.COM With 525 million photos posted so far, Flickr may be the largest photo site. But its strengths are social interaction and personal expression, like a visual blog. For example, 75 percent of Flickr photos have been made available for public browsing, commenting, downloading and subscribing. (On many rival sites, you couldn’t make your photos public if you wanted to.)

Flickr’s Groups concept lets complete strangers collaborate on theme-related collections. There are 300,000 such groups on Flickr: collections of Nikon photos, of macro (superclose-up) photos, and so on. (For a really good time, click the Groups tab and search for “stick figures in peril.”)

SHUTTERFLY.COM This service is free, all right, and it offers unlimited storage. The slide shows are attractive, complete with crossfades and speed control. You can retouch photos, crop them, add borders and otherwise get them ready for ordering prints. As on Flickr, other members can submit their own photos to themed “collections” that you establish.

And, lordy, does this site make ordering prints easy. In fact, selling prints — and calendars, photo books, jewelry, greeting cards and so on — is Shutterfly’s real mission; sharing photos online seems to be only an afterthought.

For example, you can view the thumbnails of only 12 photos at a time, no matter how big the browser window. Similarly, Shutterfly imposes a maximum photo-viewing size, and it’s not so big.

Finally, the public can’t view your photos — only people you invite can. That could be good or bad, depending on your point of view.

WEBSHOTS.COM This site is a hybrid of Flickr (public photos, comments, search box); Shutterfly (order prints, luggage tags, magnets, books); and Times Square (the free account is cluttered with ads). Webshots also caps your free storage at 1,000 photos, a limit that goes up by 100 for each month that you’re a member. As on most of the services here, some limitations go away if you upgrade your account for $25 a year.

Webshots’ specialty is sharing photos online; handy buttons let you send a photo by e-mail, link to it on your Web site, share it on Facebook.com and so on. The slide shows are awesome, complete with subtle zooming and panning — and you can link to or e-mail the slide shows, too.

Unfortunately, you can’t just flag each photo for printing as it goes by. You must enter a special print-ordering mode, several pages deep, and choose from tiny thumbnails.

KODAKGALLERY.COM Kodak Gallery (formerly Ofoto.com) follows the Shutterfly model. It lays the gift-ordering features on thick, and is restrictive about photo sharing; for example, you can’t share with the public.

On the other hand, you can pick up your prints an hour after ordering them at a CVS drugstore (although you pay 23 cents each instead of Kodak’s 15). Flickr, Shutterfly and Snapfish also offer local pickup — at Target, for example.

Over all, both Shutterfly and KodakGallery are terrific. Note, though, that Kodak doesn’t let your pals download the full-resolution photos (to print at home, for example) unless you upgrade to the $25-a-year plan.

PHOTOBUCKET.COM Photobucket stands out because it accommodates videos and Flash animations, not just photos. And you can embed your photos onto your pages at MySpace, Blogger, Friendster, Facebook and so on, which makes Photobucket even more Web-wired than Webshots.

Cheapskates like me, however, will be put off by the crushing limits of the free account. You can’t post any photo larger than 1,024-by-768 pixels (smaller than 1 megapixel); there’s a one-gigabyte storage ceiling; and no slide show can contain more than 10 pictures. You can do much better.

PICASA WEB ALBUMS (photos.google.com) Who knew that Google has its own photo-sharing site? (Then again, what kind of site doesn’t Google offer these days?)

Picasa Web Albums is ad-free, simple to use and loaded with powerful features. For example, you can upload your photos to it directly from iPhoto (on the Mac) or Picasa (on Windows). And one click generates the necessary HTML codes to embed a photo or an entire slide show into your own Web site — sweet.

You’re offered three thumbnail sizes when working with your albums. You can reorder the photos in an album or slide show just by dragging them. Slide shows are stunning and nearly full screen. You can order a print with one click; you can download the full-resolution originals; and both public sharing and commenting are available.

The only weirdness is that Google hands off printing to either Shutterfly or something called PhotoWorks (your choice). That’s the only part of this service that doesn’t feel utterly seamless.

YAHOO PHOTOS (photos.yahoo.com) Yes! Yes! This one’s free, it’s unlimited, it’s got both public and private photo sharing, you can edit the pictures, and your audience can rate, tag or add comments to your photos. Slide shows are big and clear, and — yes! — there’s a one-click Order Print button.

Unfortunately, Yahoo Photos is about to shut down. Having bought Flickr, Yahoo’s executives figured there’s no sense in running rival sites.

No! No!

SNAPFISH.COM Now we’re talking. One click begins a slide show, complete with speed slider, background-color control and a relatively huge photo size. Moms, dads and grads can flag the shots worth printing with a single click.

All the usual goodies are here: electronic sharing with family (although not with the public); editing and cropping tools; and a catalog of photo prints, posters, mugs and decks of cards. All of it is designed simply and clearly, making it impossible to get lost.

There are paid subscription options — to upload videos, for example — but the free account is everything a family shutterbug could desire. Storage is unlimited if you order something once a year.

The bottom line. Next time my mother wants to review my photos on the screen and order prints with one click, I’ll use Snapfish or Kodak Gallery. And next time I just want my friends to be able to see and grab copies of my pictures online, I’ll use Picasa Web Albums.

All three of these services are free, devoid of advertising, quick and technologically foolproof — no matter how old you are.

 

Photo Sharing Even the Folks Can Handle - New York Times

Monday
Jun112007

Free Software to Play DVDs

By J. D. BIERSDORFER
Published: May 24, 2007

Q. I would like to watch DVDs on my computer with a program that works better than Windows Media Player. Are there any free ones available?

A. Windows Media Player is Microsoft’s free software for playing audio and video files, and it comes with most versions of Windows. You can find plenty of other options.

Start in software archive sites that offer ratings and reviews by other users. Sites like www.download.com, www.tucows.com and www.versiontracker.com link to free programs, shareware and trial versions of commercial software to sample.

AVS DVD Player (www.avsmedia.com/DVDPlayer ) and VLC media player (www.videolan.org) are two of the more popular free DVD programs. Commercial programs for playing DVDs on your computer cost about $50, but they typically offer more features like support for Dolby sound, brightness controls and battery-saving functions for laptops. Free trial versions of InterVideo’s WinDVD (www.intervideo.com/WinDVD) and CyberLink’s PowerDVD (www.cyberlink.com) are available to download.

Source: Free Software to Play DVDs - New York Times

Wednesday
Jun062007

MP3 My MP3 Recorder

MP3myMP3 Recorder saves any audio you hear on your computer straight to mp3 or wav. IF YOU CAN HEAR IT, YOU CAN RECORD IT!





Click here for larger screen shots

MP3myMP3 Recorder 2.0- FREE
Record internet radio and save to mp3 or wav. Record streaming audio from the Internet, microphone, or any other source for that matter. MP3myMP3 Recorder works directly with your system sound card - if you can hear it, you can record it! Use the scan tool to list all mp3, wav, aif, swa, or sun au audio files on your computer - then play and record portions of any of these files. MP3myMP3 Recorder offers customizable colors, timer, on top mode, and skinning.
100% Spyware /
Adware Free
.

This program is meant to be extremely intuitive to use, with enough features to get the job done quickly and easily…
1. Select the audio source you wish to record from.(Choose Stereo Mix or Wave mix or similar this will record all audio through your sound card.)
2. Open your favorite audio player. ie (WinAmp) and start playing something.
3. The combination of the settings below ultimately determines the overall recording input level. Fine tune your recording levels so that the meter on the right just hits the bottom of the red zone at the loudest point of the audio you are recording.
a)Player audio level
b)Master Volume Level
c)Recording Level
4. Click the Record button.
5. Click Stop when you’re ready to end the recording.
6. Click the Play button to listen to your recording.
7. Check your Mp3 Export settings.
8. Save your recording to a Wave file or an Mp3 file or both.
Use the scan tool to list all Mp3’s and Wav, Aif, Swa or Sun Au audio files on your entire computer. You can play and record portions of any of these files.

Source: MP3 My MP3 Recorder - Record sounds and music to MP3 Free!