SERVICE TAGS YOUR PHOTOS TO FIND THEM QUICKLY
Now that you've owned a digital camera for a while, chances are your
collection of digital photographs is growing to the point where
they're becoming completely unmanageable. If you find yourself
drowning in a sea of digital images and you just can't remember
where you stored that picture of cousin Betty at the beach that you
took on your vacation two years ago, you might want to consider the
benefits of tagging.
Basically, a tag is nothing more than a keyword that somehow
describes the image to which it is attached. And the premise behind
tagging is a simple one. The more tags you assign to an image, the
better the chances are of finding it. It turns out that there are a
number of standards out there that attempt to regulate many of the
different characteristics associated to digital images. Some of the
standards apply to compression. For example, the JPEG standard
allows for the reduction of digital information that represents the
image we see. By eliminating a certain amount of redundancy that's
inherent in a raw digital image, the physical size of that file will
be substantially smaller. Other standards such as EXIF (Exchangeable
Image File Format), IPTC (International Press Telecommunications
Council) and XMP (Extensible Metadata Platform) allow the inclusion
of text to be invisibly imbedded within the digital images. Adobe's
Photoshop Album and Apple's iPhoto are two examples of programs that
have the ability to read and act upon these invisible text tags or
metadata so that you can more easily search through and locate the
images that meet your search criteria.
But adding these tags yourself can be somewhat cumbersome and
hit-and-miss at best when you're trying to add them to hundreds if
not thousands of photos. Say you have a picture of your sister's
family. You probably would add her name and the name of everyone in
the picture. You may even add the date, location and the event. But
there's a whole lot more going on in that picture that you wouldn't
even consider adding as a tag but you might use when you're trying
to find that picture a year or two later on. Where did I put that
picture we took at the beach in Hawaii with my sister wearing a pink
bathing suit and her son eating a hotdog? If you didn't add the tags
hotdog, beach, pink and bathing suit, you're not going to find it
using those keywords. But there is a service that will add all those
relevant search tags to all of your photos for you.
Tagcow lets you send one photo or thousands of them to be tagged
automatically. Tagcow uses people who are expert at examining
subject matter in pictures. They also use a sophisticated artificial
intelligence inference engine that looks at the images and then adds
tags of its own.
Together, they can process literally thousands of photographic
images typically in 24 to 48 hours after submission. Tagcow is
understandably secretive in how their process works exactly.
Once your images are tagged, they are uploaded back to your computer
to be used in any of your photo applications as well as online
services such as Flikr or SmugMug, both of which have the ability to
read the imbedded metadata. If you already have your images entered
into Flikr, just enter your Flickr account information and Tagcow
will connect to Flickr, pull down the photos, submit them for
tagging and post the tags to your images in Flickr.
Tagcow offers a variety of tagging plans that begin at $9.95 for
tagging 250 images. Check out the website for more pricing plans.
Privacy is also an important issue so be sure to read Tagcow's
privacy policy before you commit to downloading your pictures to
them. With all of your photos properly tagged, you'll be amazed at
how easy it will be to search and locate virtually any single or
collection of images.
www.tagcow.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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