digikam is super-excellent
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Author | Content |
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tuxchick Oct 24, 2009 9:06 PM EDT |
I love Digikam, archive management, RAW conversion, and basic editing all in one. One of the shining FOSS stars. |
dinotrac Oct 25, 2009 12:05 AM EDT |
Tc - I agree. My wife agrees. Our kids agree. As to being clunky to use... HUH??????? Have you ever tried to wade through that easy to use stuff that gets packaged with the cameras? Digikam is lovely. |
jdixon Oct 25, 2009 12:28 AM EDT |
> Have you ever tried to wade through that easy to use stuff that gets packaged with the cameras? I just removed Kodak Easyshare from a computer. That piece of software has to be one of the worst written/most intrusive of any ever made. We got a copy of the equivalent Fuji software with a Fuji camera we got many years ago. When we installed it on our then current Win98 machine, it blue screened it and we had to reinstall Win98 to get rid of it. |
hkwint Oct 25, 2009 4:23 PM EDT |
Quoting:Have you ever tried to wade through that easy to use stuff that gets packaged with the cameras? Yes, two weeks ago, from Fuji, and rotating images was easier than with Digikam I have to admit. Changing the dates was also rather easy, but you had to do it day by day (the CLI tool for Windows XP worked for 'one of the two dates' attached to JPEG's?). Nonetheless, after I found out Gentoo screwed up (I did?) and 'downgraded' to digiKam 0.9, I'm now happy with 0.10 again. I just rotated photos and sent them (coincidentally) two minutes ago! |
DrDubious Oct 25, 2009 9:20 PM EDT |
I make a great deal of use of the geolocation plugins. I'm not rich enough to afford a digital camera with a built-in GPS, so I synchronize the camera's clock with the GPS and record my tracks when I go it. Digikam can take the timestamps on the photos and correlate them to locations along the track, inserting the GPS data. There's a Google Maps based interface for fine-tuning the locations, too. I still tend to do my photo-editing in GIMP though. |
techiem2 Oct 26, 2009 4:51 PM EDT |
I must be the weird one...my workflow generally consists of:
Take pics
Download RAWs to appropriately created directories (I use the date and name of the event)
Batch convert them to jpg with a script that runs ufraw in batch mode.
Do any re-processing in ufraw or gimp Maybe I'll have to take a look at digikam and see if it would fit my workflow. :P I've just generally found most photo management programs to be more annoying than useful to me. |
newmikey Oct 28, 2009 11:59 AM EDT |
@techiem2 I do exactly like you with batch-processing and then going back over some shots that need it with UFRaw or RawTherapee. I use digikam primarily for organizing files and for 16-bits operations on UFRaw-generated PNG's Digikam's photo editing tools are excellent, cataloging is a bit annoying, I agree, but without it I cannot find anything anymore ;-( |
Steven_Rosenber Oct 29, 2009 12:19 AM EDT |
I can't seem to get the sharpening right in digiKam. I just need to sharpen and have it look the same way it does in the GIMP. It just doesn't look as good when I do it the various ways in digiKam. |
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