St. Petersburg Times
Online: Personal Tech
 tampabay.com
Print storySubscribe to the Times

Virtual shoeboxes for your digital photos

By DAVE GUSSOW
Published May 26, 2003

photo
Software, such as Picasa, can help you organize your digital photos, print them and sometimes back them up to a CD-R.

photo
Apple Computer's iPhoto

Instead of cramming boxes full of family photos into closets, people now use their computers to store their pictures.

Yet finding a missing image on a hard drive can be just as frustrating as a family scavenger hunt through boxes looking for a particular photo.

To make it easier, software companies offer an array of photo organizing and management programs, virtual shoeboxes that can be filled with digital images and organized into albums or folders.

Many include at least basic editing tools to fix red eye, crop or make other adjustments. They also have fun features, from creating slideshows to making it easy to share photos by e-mail or on the Web.

These programs are aimed at newcomers to digital photography and do not include all the editing features of some of the top photo-editing programs for consumers, such as Photoshop Elements, Jasc's Paint Shop Pro and Microsoft's Picture It Digital Image Pro.

Here's a sampling:

Paint Shop Photo Album Jasc, Windows, $49: The successor to Jasc's excellent After Shot program tops this field. It's easy to use, includes a range of editing tools and makes it simple to share digital photos. In addition to a Quick Fix button for basic cleanup, Photo Album also has an Adjust Wizard to fiddle with color, exposure, vividness and sharpness. Its Help features also are strong. A free 30-day trial can be downloaded from its Web site (www.jasc.com)

Photoshop Album (Adobe, Windows, $49.99): Photoshop in the name doesn't mean it has all the features of its well-known higher-end cousins. In fact, Adobe says Album is complementary to Photoshop and Elements, not simply a lower-end version. It emphasizes organizing your digital photos, which it does well with a relatively easy system of placing category tags on the photos. It includes a timeline across the top of the screen that helps you look up photos by date. For more than basic editing, though, use Elements.

PhotoSuite 5 (Roxio, Windows, $49.99): Roxio tries hard to make PhotoSuite easy to use. It has a simple, clean look, with four main icons down the left (Transfer, Edit & Create, Print & Share, and View, Organize and Archive). Moving the mouse over any of the icons gives additional choices. It has a good tutorial and features the Photo Doctor, a one-click basic fix for photos. It may be too basic for anyone with even a little digital photo editing experience, and it was sluggish in our tests.

Picasa Lifescape Solutions, Windows, $29.99: Picasa excels as a photo organizer, finding images on the hard drive and displaying them in folders. But it doesn't match up with the others on editing tools or flexibility on functions such as the slideshow. It does have a free trial period from its Web site (www.picasa.net)

ACDSee 5.0 (ACD, Windows, $49.95): ACDSee has a cluttered look and a confusing array of icons. It's not intuitive and requires more of an effort to learn than the others in this group.

iPhoto 2 (Apple, Macintosh, free download): The initial release of Apple's iPhoto showed promise as a management tool for digital photos but never seemed to have all of the functionality needed. Version 2 fixes that, letting you organize, add keywords, color correct, print and backup digital photos. IPhoto 2 added much-needed but rudimentary photo tweaking tools, so you don't need Photoshop to do minor retouching, contrast and brightness adjustments and color correction. It also offers a variety of printing options, from one image to multiple images per page, and preset options such as greeting card, sampler and contact sheet. A neat feature: IPhoto alerts you if you try to print an image larger than its resolution allows, which keeps you from wasting ink and paper on pixelated prints.

- Times staff writer William Lampkin contributed to this report.

[Last modified May 23, 2003, 12:25:03]

Personal Tech today

  • Going digital
  • Postings
  • Site Seeing
  • Convenience key in where to print digital photos
  • Tips for choosing a digital camera
  • Virtual shoeboxes for your digital photos

  • Review
  • C-5050 Zoom: point-and-shoot simplicity for the serious hobbyist
  • Photosmart 935: easy to use, but power hungry
  • PowerShot A300: simple camera, complex manuals
  • Stylus 300: an 'all weather' point-and-shoot
  • Computer Game Review
  • Technology reviews

  • Solutions
  • Smoothing the transition from Windows 98 to XP

  • The Buzz
  • A panic button for your IBM PC

  • The Digital Life
  • The expanding digital hub
  • Specials
    Hackers:
    a special report by the St. Petersburg Times.

     

    Archives
    Click here
    for previous technology coverage

    Contact
    E-mail us at
    personaltech@
    sptimes.com

     

    Tech blog
    For additional information and news from Personal Tech editor Dave Gussow click here.

     

    From The Wire
  • Newspaper circulation may be worse than it looks
  • South Koreans to get Apple's iPhone this week
  • B&N Nook sells out, too late for holiday orders
  • Sony hopes online service will build brand loyalty
  • Dell's profit, stock drop on weak quarterly report
  • 200 Web sites spread al-Qaida's message in English
  • Web sites cater to for-sale-by-owner home sellers
  • Yahoo jumps on Twitter bandwagon to improve search
  • GE, Vivendi talks over NBC Universal stretch on
  • Astronaut's baby daughter born as he circles Earth
  •  

    Back to Top

    © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
    490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
     
    tampabaycom