@czarbucks @SunnJax @intrepidhero
🧵 2 A couple of the displays-- I didn't take these out of the #PhotoAlbums, so kinda crappy, but you get the idea..lol
#90s #decor #art #throwbackthursday

📷 A Oficina de História regressa já na próxima semana, na manhã de 6 de Novembro.

O espaço anfitrião vai ser, desta vez, a livraria STET, onde terão a oportunidade de conversar com a Marta Machado acerca do seu projecto de doutoramento com fotografias da Guerra Colonial.

ENTRADA LIVRE

ℹ️ https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/events/ohi-2425-03/

#Histodons #Photography #HistoryAndImage #Colonialism #LiberationWars #GuerraColonial #Fotografia #HistóriaEImagem #ColonialismoPortuguês #PortugueseColonialism #PhotoAlbums

Os álbuns e as fotografias de guerra | Oficina de História e Imagem | IHC

Terceira sessão do ciclo 2024-2025 da Oficina de História e Imagem. Sessão aberta e fora de portas: uma conversa com Marta Machado na livraria STET.

ihc
Apple photos scrambling my photos like eggs with random names and spread across a dozen randomized folders is the dumbest shit ever in life and one of the main reasons, I don't use that shit. #Apple #ApplePhotos #PhotoAlbums #ImageLibrary

Reading Time: 4 minutes

When you take photos on an iphone or other such device it’s easy to take photos and never organise them, unless you share specific photos with specific people. Images are automatically organised by time, date, month, location and people by photo apps but this is just an illusion of organisation.

By playing with Photoprism, Nextcloud, OneCloud, MyCloud (the Swisscom one), Immich and others I have often come across the same problem. When you’re synching thousands of images at a time devices time out after a few minutes, and you need to start from scratch over, and over, and over again. I’ve encountered this issue with almost all backup solutions.

If I had created an album for each month, week, or even event I would now save a lot of time. It’s not that it makes synching painless, but rather that it makes it easier to backup individual albums rather than 19,000 images at a time. With an album you select it and 300 images are uploaded from one album, and 12 from another, and 230 from yet another.

To use an analogy, imagine that a photo album is a head of hair, at the barber’s. You could cut an individual’s hair in five to ten minutes, and move on to the next and get through 72 hair cuts, or you could cut 72 people’s hair simultaneously but everyone would need to remain in place for eight hours. This is the nightmare I’m putting iphone photo backup apps through with my experimentation.

PhotoPrismUpload

This morning I was experimenting with PhotoPrismUpload. I wanted to experiment with this app because it’s directly paired with PhotoPrism and PhotoPrism looks like a good iCloud and Google Photos alternative. The first flaw that I spotted is that it doesn’t detect that all of the photographs are already backed up to PhotoPrism so I need to spend hours getting it to say “This file is uploaded, this file is also uploaded, and that file is now uploaded.”

This, in and of itself is quite time consuming but to add to the experience it downloads the offline images from iCloud to the phone, uploads them, and then leaves them there. The consequence is that my backup phone with a large hard drive is now low on memory and the sync is blocked.

To the question “Does this matter?” the answer is “nope”. Not for me, because my images are backed up. It’s a question of convenience. If I was to suggest a feature, which I should, later, it would be an option to “Show only un-uploaded images” like we have with e-mail clients for unread messages.

If I had this option then I would upload x number of pictures until the app timed out, select the latest un-uploaded images, upload them, and repeat this until everything is synched. Now that the phone is low on memory I will abort the experiment, but I won’t stop using the app because it is simple and convenient to use.

It clearly shows which images are uploaded, and which still need to be uploaded. When you sync images it’s quick and intuitive. You have two or three ads displayed but they’re not annoying like the awful adverts you get with mobile games. I got ads for Google Ads and for Mediamarkt. For 3 CHF you can do away with ads.

Photosync and WebDav

Photosync is the recommended app, by the developers of Photoprism but I don’t like that it encourages you to pay once for functionality that should be by default and a second time for added features. Despite this I do really like how Webdav works. I setup two webdav accounts. One that is for when I’m on home wifi and the second for when I’m connecting through the VPN when I’m out.

WebDav is an excellent tool because it knows which photos have been uploaded. With the Photosync app photos that are not uploaded yet are highlighted with a red border. You click the red sync button and you can upload “new”, “selected” or “all”. It then gives you the choice between “computer”, “phone/tablet”, “webdav”, “ftp”, “smb”, “files/usb/icloud”, dropbox, onedrive and google drive. I use webdav 2 and within seconds the files are uploaded. If I was out I would use Webdav 3.

The real advantage of the Photosync app is that you can see “new”, “selected” or “all”. If an upload is interrupted for any reason you don’t need to “select all” and upload. You can select just the “new” images, and within seconds you’re synching again.

Photosync information is not automatically synched between two phones so I don’t know how well Webdav works, via this app, when synching the same library from two phones.

And Finally

By organising photos into albums by hand you make online synchronisation more granular. Instead of uploading 19,000 files at once you upload one album, and then another, until everything is uploaded. It’s easier for backup solutions to keep track of their progress, and you don’t need to keep scrolling up and down to keep the screen awake and uploading.

PhotoPrismUpload and Photosync are both interesting solutions for synching to PhotoPrism but PhotoPrismUpload has the advantage of costing 3 CHF not to see ads, whereas Photosync costs 25 CHF for premium features, as well as 6 CHF for other features. If I had seen PhotoPrismUpload before Photosync I would have been happy. PhotoPrismUpload is a dedicated tool that works well within its niche.

https://www.main-vision.com/richard/blog/the-case-for-using-albums-in-iphoto-or-webdav/

#archive #backup #day413 #endless #photoAlbums #photography #timeConsuming #WebDav

‎Photo Uploader for PhotoPrism

‎This app will help you easily synchronize photos and videos on your device with your own PhotoPrism server. Photo uploader for for PhotoPrism is not official app! App features: - View your device photos, videos, albums - Establish connection with your local or cloud PhotoPrism server - Upload selec…

App Store

My husband is slowly, painstakingly, #scanning his parents old #PhotoAlbums.

It started because his sister wanted one of them with her baby photos in, so he scanned everything in it as he knew he wouldn't get it back. He was amazed how well they came out, so has started doing all of them.

Walls that look smoky amber in photos are blue again, grass is green instead of brown, muted and dull colours are coming back to life. It really is something to behold.

PhotoPrism vs Piwigo Comparison Video

PeerTube

Do you know anyone who would discard #photoAlbums and #familyTrees that their own mother produced?

Literally in the rubbish.

We have identified one such person and we are quietly disgusted.

In my latest #GemLog article on FiXato's #GemPort, I explore the concept of #PhotoAlbums for Gemini:
gemini://fixato.org/2021-03-10-exploring-photo-albums-for-gemini.gmi
(or web proxied via vulpes.one)

If you have any suggestions or comments for my #Gemini #blog article, please leave a public reply to this Mastodon post. :)

(Don't want your reply potentially aggregated on the web/gem log post? Please reply as 'unlisted' instead, or start it with NoRepost.)

fixato.org/2021-03-10-exploring-photo-albums-for-gemini.gmi - Gemini proxy

Piwigo is a good replacement for Flickr to host your own online photo collection if you have lost faith in cloud providers

With Flickr recently being bought out and the possibility looming of my 9,700 photos being moved and having all my social media links broken, I had a look at some free open source alternatives.

I found Piwigo which not only has a very rich selection of plugins, but it also has one that will import my Flickr photo albums complete with each photo's caption and tags.

I've captured a few screenshots from my album to give an idea of what some of it looks like (there are numerous other themes to choose from). So this is my first link to my self-hosted photos at photos.gadgeteer.co.za/index.p…

There is also direct upload/export support from digiKam to Piwigo. Photos can be auto resized smaller on upload to save space. More nfo on Piwigo itself at piwigo.org.

#flickr #piwigo #photoalbums photos.gadgeteer.co.za/index.p…