When I am looking for a photo management program, I want one which meets most or all of the following requirements: - Allows me to store my photos where I want on the disk. I don't want the program to ...
Photographers typically lean towards Windows or macOS for their editing needs. It’s just the way things work. However, you can buck the trend and turn to Linux with some pretty solid results; you just ...
Linux users have done without a good graphics editor for years, but Affinity has changed the game and made it easier than ...
If you’re tired of getting pre-made digital photo frames that kinda work but kinda don’t, then give this RedPost Linux photo frame a shot. Sure, it costs $549, but comes with a 19-inch LCD monitor, a ...
Using Ubuntu Linux to import and edit photos from a digital camera. By J. D. Biersdorfer Companies are starting to see the advantages of being able to do large amounts of computing with technology ...
Does anyone have any experience with getting monitor calibration or color management to work on Linux? I've been silently lurking around here for a long time, but I went out and bought a DSLR camera ...
During the past several years, my wife and I have been trying to organize our ever-increasing collection of digital photographs. First, lacking a digital camera, all we had to do was organize the ...
Linux may not have a ton of super advanced photo managers, but it has a few solid programs, the best of which is easily the near professional-grade digiKam. DigiKam is designed for the more ...
Ever since its inception, the Windows family of Operating Systems has dominated computers across the world, and continues to do so till this day. Although other Operating Systems (eg Mac OS X, Linux) ...
This coming Thursday is Thanksgiving in America. As I have yet to make any progress in convincing the Swiss to also make it a holiday, and we tend to have rather large Thanksgiving dinner gatherings, ...