All of these products a somewhat over built, in a attempt to hit the  
widest market share. (Museums arent high on many vendor's lists, I'm  
afraid.)
And they are user-targeted.  In the case of lightroom, its for  
photographers and customers of photo studios.  I really would  
recommend trying all the demos and then use what fits your workflow.   
Also, look for opportunities to switch off options and limit what  
users will see and do.  Cumulus is particulary good at that.

jeff



Jeffrey Evans
Digital Imaging Specialist
Princeton University Art Museum
609.258.8579



On Dec 7, 2007, at 10:18 AM, Snyder, Rebecca wrote:

> Unfortunately, Lightroom doesn't work on networks making sharing
> difficult. Each person, on their own computer, has their own mini
> database (which essentially Lightroom is) that is not accessible to
> others - unless they are sharing a common computer and login. It's  
> great
> for managing personal workflows, so far no so great helping offices
> manage their collective workflow.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> You might also look at Adobe Lightroom.  Very capable, intuitive and
> powerful image manager.  IMHO
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