On Mon, 2018-01-29 at 07:49 -0500, William Oliver wrote: > On Mon, 2018-01-29 at 12:27 +0000, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: > > Looking for some advice here. I have a large set of old slides > > (transparencies) which I'm currently scanning for the family, but of > > course many of them are out of order. Clearly they don't have EXIF > > information (they were taken in the 70s and 80s). I'm looking for a > > way > > to order them *visually* after scanning, but the usual apps (Digikam, > > Shotwell, Lightroom) don't seem to be able to do this. They only > > understand machine-readable sorting, e.g. by the file mod date, size, > > exposure data etc., none of which is useful in this case. > > > > Any ideas? > > > > poc > > > I think the buzzword for searching for software is "gallery," and > most of them are web-based. I use pwigo (www.pwigo.orgorg ), which has a > manual sort option (though you have to dig in a little to find it). It's actually piwigo, but thanks. I'll take a look. > But if you're not serving a web page somewhere, I don't know. There's > always the Wikipedia page to sort through, I guess, though I don't find > that useful as often as I hope: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparis > on_of_photo_gallery_software I'm already using Google Photos, which I suppose counts as a gallery, but it can get a bit slow when dealing with large batches so I generally use it for sharing the final results. My idea was to find a tool to process photos locally before uploading them. I'll check out that Wikipedia page in any case. poc _______________________________________________ users mailing list -- users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to users-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx