- Georgia Institute of Technology :: News Room :: Portable Device Quickly Detects Early Alzheimer’s http://tinyurl.com/22zfom #
- Ten tips for improving posture and ergonomics http://tinyurl.com/2pzao4 #
- Tip of the Iceberg by Thom Hogan: Great explanation of the hidden costs of photography. http://tinyurl.com/29nsky #
- Can EMC convince you to do online data backups? http://tinyurl.com/yqotfk #
- Jun Murakoshi’s multi-functional Shelving Chair http://tinyurl.com/27toz3 #
- The Reason Behind Apple’s Stock Slide: The iPod’s Zero Growth http://tinyurl.com/2xrags #
- Loc8tor ‘Lite’ makes losing your keys a thing of the past http://tinyurl.com/ywn7mu #
- Vincennes: 1941 http://tinyurl.com/2xjdzv #
- Financial Crisis in Second Life; Virtual Banks Banned http://tinyurl.com/28lls3 #
- Caroline’s Kitchen: 1939 http://tinyurl.com/3bxqya #
- Beauty Retouching with Smart Filters in Photoshop http://tinyurl.com/25qr5z #
- Test yourself to find what you need to be happier http://tinyurl.com/29bhmm #
- A Face in the Crowd: 1942 http://tinyurl.com/3dzl4o #
- Apple’s attention shifts to Mac as iPod growth slows http://tinyurl.com/yvce6j #
- Comics: Big Boy And The Power Of Licensing http://tinyurl.com/yokwdp #
Condensed knowledge for 2008-01-22
- Maryland governor plans to drop electronic voting, buy optical scanners http://tinyurl.com/3a4o28 #
- Jerkstopper prevents AC connector damage http://tinyurl.com/2whjgt #
- Low cost, nano-based solar cell from GE http://tinyurl.com/2jngov #
- Jasper County: 1940 http://tinyurl.com/24bqtb #
- Chain Bridge: 1865 http://tinyurl.com/yuv9xc #
- Combined Taser and MP3 Player http://tinyurl.com/2yfwhg #
- Face to Face with the Matthew Effect: Making Yourself Heard http://tinyurl.com/2sxaud #
- Bungalow Bounceback http://tinyurl.com/23b9k6 #
- A Reality Check about Blogging for Money http://tinyurl.com/2hn26y #
The next stage for Lightroom
I am a happy user of Adobe Lightroom. It has helped me get a handle on my growing photo library. While it largely replicates the functionality of Adobe Bridge, it does so with a much better interface, and includes extra functionality that makes its price worthwhile. I do most of my photo processing in Lightroom these days, and don’t go into Photoshop unless I absolutely need it.
There are a few things that need to change in order for Lightroom to become a truly valuable addition to a digital photographer’s tool set. Sure, there are some small features that could be introduced here and there, and there are some bug fixes that need to occur as well. By and large though, what I see as the biggest needed improvement can’t be explained in a few words. It requires a more detailed explanation.
Say someone starts getting into photography in a serious sort of way. They begin editing their photos on their computer, and soon find, as they get into the several hundreds and thousands, that they need something to help them organize and manage their photos. Right? Well, say they get Lightroom. They’re happy campers now. They take more photos, and then even more. They can edit the meta-data, batch process photos, export for web and print, put together photo galleries, etc. It’s great!
Here’s where things start to get tricky though. As that photo library gets bigger, it needs to be moved off the primary computer, be it a laptop or a desktop machine. Its sheer size demands a large external device, and hopefully one that stores the data in redundant fashion, to guard against hardware failures. Well, no problem, they get a huge drive and move their photos onto it. That drive is connected via USB or Firewire, and they continue to work with Lightroom. Things are just peachy.
Guess what: at some point, that photographer will need to shoot on location. They’ll take a trip either out of town, or out of the country. If they don’t have a laptop already, they’ll need to get one, because every digital photographer knows they’ll very likely need to process some photos on location, away from home.
But guess where their photo library is? It’s at home, of course. So what do you think happens when you open Lightroom while you’re away from your photo library? Why, you can’t! It tells you drive X is not available. (I should specify this occurs when the Lightroom library is stored on an external device. You can, of course, store the library locally and the photos externally, but as the library gets bigger, you’ll run into space problems. I did.)
So what can you do? You can create a new photo library, import the photos into it, and work with them that way. But wait a minute? Where’s all that beautiful meta-data that you worked so hard at? Where’s your keyword database, with its hierarchical structure, so you can tag easier without having to remember all the keywords you’d want to use? Where are all your locations? Where are your collections? Nowhere. You have to start fresh, and then when you get home, you have to re-import those photos into your main library, then reconcile keywords, locations, etc. It’s just not pretty, and it’s not practical. And on top of that, you may run into certain import bugs…
What Lightroom needs is the ability to have a two-part library: a portable, main library, that travels with the machine where Lightroom is installed, and an archive library that can sit on an external device, or multiple external devices. This is NOT the same as the Vault concept one finds in Aperture. No, it goes far beyond that. The Vault concept is meant for backing up the photo library, but doesn’t address the problem of running out of space in the main library. It simply allows you to back up your work on multiple devices.
Hear me out, because I realize the concept I’m introducing is a bit complicated. The Lightroom user needs to have the ability to have access to all of their meta-data from all of their photos while traveling or while away from their main photo library. It doesn’t matter whether that person uses a laptop or a desktop. If they separate their computer from the external device that hosts their photos, they should still be able to have access to their photo library — everything but the actual photos which are to be found elsewhere.
Huh? Stay with me on this one. This isn’t the same thing as having your photo library on the laptop itself instead of the external drive. In that case, should you have your laptop with you, only the photos stored on the laptop will show up in the library, while the ones to be found on an external drive will not show up when you open Lightroom. But this points out two problems.
One, you’ll run out of space on your laptop very soon if you have a large library, even if you store the bulk of your photos elsewhere, because Lightroom builds either full-size previews, or fairly large ones (you decide this in the Preferences). Those previews are stored with the photo library, and if it resides on the laptop, the drive will fill up pretty soon.
Two, simply making those photos stored externally unavailable when Lightroom is separated from the external device doesn’t help you much. You need to be able to see at least the thumbnails, and have the meta-data available for searching, not crossed out or grayed out.
Let me outline the main points of my proposed functioning for the Lightroom library. Perhaps this will make it easier to understand:
- A two-part library. A local/portable one, that holds all of the meta-data and thumbnails, plus a portable collection of photos that the photographer would like to have ready for processing and use no matter where they are. And the main/archive library, that holds a backup copy of the library’s meta-data and thumbnails, plus all of the photos that have been moved off the local/portable library.
- Obviously, the ability to move photos freely from the local/portable library to the main/archive library, as needed. This would allow the photographer to decide which photos to keep local and portable, and move others to the archive in order to save space on the laptop or desktop that they’re taking with them on location.
- The two-part library syncs the meta-data and thumbnails automatically and perhaps offers choices for conflicting data when the external device that holds the main/archive library is reconnected to the laptop/desktop.
- Just to make things clear, the local/portable library would hold meta-data, thumbnails for all of the photos in the library, plus whatever group of photos the photographer decides to keep local. This would keep its size small and portable while allowing the user to view thumbnails for all of the photos in the library even when away from the archive library. They would even be able to do searches on the meta-data and update it as needed. The changes would sync when the archive would be re-connected. The photos stored in the archive would be marked by a special border or icon to let the user know they’re not available in their full size while the archive would be disconnected.
This is the sort of functionality I will expect from Lightroom. It would make it a truly powerful and portable piece of software. I know some people say that Bridge does the same things, but I’ve used both, and I like the Lightroom interface a LOT more.
Condensed knowledge for 2008-01-21
- Exclusives: The Tom Cruise Indoctrination Video Scientologists Don’t Want You To See: He’s gone cuckoo. Com.. http://tinyurl.com/2wqkjw #
- Belkin Conserve Energy-Saving Surge Protector http://tinyurl.com/3btrfu #
- The Salaries of Disney Execs http://tinyurl.com/3dzj5p #
- Dutch RFID Transit Card Hacked http://tinyurl.com/28wgpw #
- OK, I know this isn’t ‘Beautiful’ Overload, but check it http://tinyurl.com/2lcx3d #
- AT&T finally announces business users’ plan for iPhone http://tinyurl.com/22hgvf #
- SmartWater Works http://tinyurl.com/3a6nds #
- Fill Er Up: 1942 http://tinyurl.com/24vosq #
- Microsoft’s new virtualization strategy could include graphics http://tinyurl.com/2q6xwh #
- Publishing Company Settles Software Suit With SIIA http://tinyurl.com/33q5ht #
Photography, take two, part five (finis)
I have completed the work of replacing photos hosted with third-party services. All of the photos that are published on my site are now hosted locally. If you’re not familiar with this effort, which took me a few months to complete, you might want to have a look at parts four, three, two and one. The main reason was to gain independence for my photographic content. Depending on third party services that might go down or go out of business for photos used in published articles is not the kind of strategy that can hold up in the long-term.
There were LOTS of posts I re-edited this time. Not only did replace the original images, but I also introduced new ones as well. This means that if you take the time to go through some of my old posts, you will see new photographs.
I’m not going to list all of the posts I modified. The list would be huge and it would dilute my message. Instead, I’m only going to point out the more significant ones. This post is the culmination of countless of hours of work. As a matter of fact, I’m going to have a little celebration. Enjoy!
- Camera review: Canon EOS 30D DSLR
- Photographing in the rain
- Patterns in everyday objects
- Watergate Hotel and the Kennedy Arts Center
- Happy Easter
- A bit about Wide Color Range and Lightroom
- Unequivocally
- A tangible argument for working in RAW format
- The first DC TECH cocktail
- A first impression
- A weekend in Manhattan
- Wish upon a star
- BSO’s Annual Donor Thank You Concert
- Photos from the Alexandria photowalk
- Goodbye little bird, goodbye
- In the waking hours
- Falling upwards
- An evening at home
- Remembering spring
- Lens review: Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS USM Zoom
- Sunset driving
- Lens review: Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS USM Zoom
- A look at my church
- Lens review: Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM Zoom Lens
- Tennis bloopers from the Legg Mason Tennis Classic
- Photos from the Legg Mason Tennis Classic
If you’d like to see all of the posts that I modified in this last round of updates, just have a look through the Photography archives, and go all the way back to April 1st of 2007, starting from August 31st of 2007. Don’t worry, this is no April Fool’s joke…