Great photo browsing – PhotoSweeper also serves as an up-to-date photo browser with a built-in search of photos by metadata, Quick Look preview, the “Info” panel with a detailed photo description, including histogram and image metadata (EXIF, IPTC etc.) What’s New. Version 2.0.1: Release notes were unavailable when this listing was updated.
The Photos app has one glaring flaw: a lack of a proper tagging feature. Yes, it does have a feature where it attempts to automatically detect and tag specific people, but (1) it's only used for tagging people, not other things, (2) it still requires significant manual intervention to add new and organise existing people/photos.
Unlike most programs, PhotoTagger allows you to assign tags to photos by choosing them from the tag tree that you create and manage yourself. If you assign a tag to a photo, all its parent tags will be included as well. For example, if you select the ‘son’ or ‘daughter’ tags the photo will immediately be assigned the ‘family’ tag.
GPS precision (exact, 1/4 mile, 1/2 mile, 1 mile, 2 mile, 5 miles, 10 miles, 20 miles, 60 miles) for latitude and longitude as a slider per photo The GPS precision needs to take into consideration that the number of earth miles at each degree of latitude changes.
Clear day 2 0 1. The problem is I can't see a way of moving the flagged photos into an album so I wanted to find out if it is actually possible to do this on the iPad.
On your iPad you should be seeing the photos in the 'Flagged' album. This album will be created automatically.
Iphoto Tagger 1 2 0 – Automatically Tag Your Photos Free
Neither the flags nor editing applied to the photos have synced after iCloud has been updated on my Macbook
Do you mean, the Photo Stream did not transfer your edits and flags to iPhoto on your mac? Archiver 2 4 0 – open create and convert archives. That is unfortunately exactly, as it is supposed to be. Your iPad add the photos to the Photo Stream, as soon as they are added to the Camera Roll. This way, the original photos will be transferred by the stream, not the later edits. If you want to stream the edited photo to your Mac, you have to share the edited copy to the Camera Roll. Then the edits will be transferred, see: http://help.apple.com/iphoto/ipad/2.0/#blnkee26bc1f
Save photos to the Camera Roll on your iOS device
Iphoto Tagger 1 2 0 – Automatically Tag Your Photos Onto
Tap a photo, album, or event and tap the Share button > Camera Roll.
Tap Selected, or change the photos you want to save:
Select different photos: Tap Choose Photos, tap up to 100 photos, and tap Next.
Select a range of photos: Tap Choose Photos, tap Range, tap the first and last photos in the range, and tap Next.
Select all the photos in an album or event: Tap All.
Tap Done.
Iphoto Tagger 1 2 0 – Automatically Tag Your Photos Onto
Jun 29, 2014 5:09 AM
Anyone who would be interested has probably already heard about the Places feature of iPhoto ’09. Using embedded Google Maps. Once you’ve done that you can browse photos by location and make some very nifty photo albums with maps. There’s more to it than that but I’d be about the millionth person to review the new features of iPhoto ’09 if I did so, so I won’t. Instead I’m going to tell you about a feature that is missing, but one that Apple have clearly been playing with. My Geotagger program has been out for a few years now and people have been happily (and least I think so) geotagging their photos. If this is done before importing them to iPhoto everything is fine, but doing it once they are already in iPhoto’s database means that iPhoto doesn’t know about the change and consequentially won’t draw these photos on the nice new maps Apple have added. So to find a solution for this I’ve been digging around in iPhoto’s database file. It’s a simple SQLite database but I haven’t fully solved it that part of the equation yet. The interesting thing I found, and the reason I’m telling you about this before I have finished an update to Geotagger, is that in the database I found two unused tables. For those of you that don’t know about database and tables pretend I said I just found two very interesting lists. The tables are called SqGpsTracks and GpsTracksEventsJoin. What this tells me is that Apple were working on the ability to link a GPS track with an iPhoto event for people that may have a GPS Datalogger and a camera as separate devices. iPhoto would then be able to match up the time a photo was taken with the GPS log and work out where the photo was taken. This process is pretty well documented already and I’ve been doing it for ages using Jeffrey Early’s excellent GPSPhotoLinker. It could also mean the display of routes on the embedded maps, but that can’t be proven at this stage.
Though I welcome this feature for the masses I have never fully trusted iPhoto to do any editing of my pictures. I”m quite happy doing all the editing and geotagging before hand and just using iPhoto to store and display pictures, but for those that want an integrated solution this would definitely be a step forward.
UPDATE: Others have been discovering similar things, Adam looked in the nib files and found more proof that Apple is working on interpolation.