NEW
WEB GALLERY MAKES SHARING PHOTOS EASIER
Does this ring a bell? A friend or family
member wants to see some of the pictures you recently took on a
vacation or at some event. So you take a sampling of photos and
attach them to an email. You hit the Send button and sit there as
your normally speedy Internet connection chugs way at the really
slower upload speed until it all gets sent. And just when you're
getting ready to leave or do something else on the computer, the
dreaded email notice arrives back saying that the person's email
isn't large enough to accommodate the attachments you just sent. So
basically, all the time you took getting the whole thing together
and sending it was for nothing. When that happens you don't
know whether to blow your brains out or strangle the recipient for
using an email service that doesn't give them enough storage space.
There has to be a better way and actually, there is.
There are a number of websites that let you upload your photos to
them. Once uploaded you can then elect to give out the website
address that points to the special area that lets anyone see what
you've uploaded. This is a great way to let people see the photos
you want to display and they don't have to waste any time
downloading them before they see them. Some of these websites charge
for these services while others offer them for free. Facebook
and SnapFish are two examples of the free websites at
www.facebook.com and www.snapfish.com. SmugMug.com offers a free 14
day trial and a then it's $39.95 a year. Go and visit some of them,
see what they have to offer and then settle on the one you think
best serves your needs and pocketbook.
Now if you own a Macintosh, Apple has just introduced something
interesting within their iLife '08 suite of applications.
Specifically they've added a new function within iPhoto '08 called
.Mac Web Gallery. This new feature within iPhoto takes the idea of
sharing your photos on the Internet to the next level. iPhoto is
Apple's application that manages, organizes and displays your
digital photographs. This latest iteration just introduced by Apple
along with three new brushed aluminum iMac models has the ability to
export any or all of your photos to the .Mac service to which you
must subscribe ($99.95 a year) in order for this to work.
Let's say you have a group of photos in your iPhoto library that you
want to share with others. You simply create a photo album within
iPhoto or use the new Event ability that automatically groups
related pictures such as a birthday or graduation for example. After
you select the collection, you just click on the Web Gallery button
at the bottom of the iPhoto display and things pretty much happen on
their own. iPhoto automatically uploads the images to your .Mac
website and creates a corresponding number of interactive pages to
accommodate the pictures. That's pretty much all you have to do.
When you want people to see your gallery, simply give them the .Mac
address to your gallery page and they will see your images in a
nicely done, interactive display. You can have for example, a number
of photo albums titled with whatever describes the collection most
accurately. You can also have your videos there as well. Moving the
mouse over the album displays a rapid flashing of all the images
contained within that grouping. The number of photos it contains is
displayed underneath.
Clicking on any Album first displays them in a grid layout. Moving a
slider lets you change the size of the images so you can see more of
them on a single page or see fewer but with more detail. You can
also display images in Mosaic which shows one large image with
smaller ones to the right. Clicking on any of these makes that
one the larger display. Carousel is pretty much like the Cover Flow
album display on an iPod or iPhone. Moving the slider below rotates
each image to the front of the screen. There's even a slideshow
option here.
The other option that should be mentioned is that if you can allow
anyone to download any or all of the images at the full resolution
in which you uploaded them. So now anyone can see, view, select and
download your photos without you having to do much more than click
iPhoto's Web Gallery Button. And of course, this also all
works with your iPhone. In fact, Apple just added a new software
button on the iPhone that lets you upload any image on the iPhone
directly to your Web Gallery.
iPhoto '08 is included in Apple's iLife '08 that sells for $79 and
is available at Apple's online and retail stores. It's also
available at stores that sells Apple software such as CompUSA and
Best Buy.
www.apple.com
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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