Thanks Godfrey. I suspected something like that, although as a long time hack (not hacker, but hack :-), I just renamed the application. I'll check what you suggest tonight.
j On Wed, 12 Jan 2005 10:08:19 -0800 (PST), Godfrey DiGiorgi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Juan, > > You don't have to rename or disable iPhoto to have the system do > something else. Run the Image Capture application and go to its > preferences. You can set the system to auto-open iPhoto, Image > Capture, any other application you desire, or do nothing. > > iPhoto is too slow for the volume of photographs I work with and > doesn't allow me to catalog off-line collections, but it's > useful for occasional stuff and making quickie books. The new > version looks very interesting. I've sent an enhancement request > with a list of cameras I think they ought to support ... the > *istDS first on that list, of course. ;-) > > The Mac mini is about the same performance envelope as my > current iMac 20". This is proving satisfactory for my current > workflow and production requirements. The neat thing is that I > could buy a Mac mini and a nice 23" Cinema display, keyboard and > mouse, and then upgrade to a G5 tower when I need the additional > power seamlessly, without having to reinvest in yet another > monitor. Or my partner (currently running WinXP) can buy a Mac > mini and have a solid Mac OS X workstation for only $600 or so > while re-using his USB keyboard, mouse and nice DVI monitor. > This is all upside! > > Godfrey > > --- Juan Buhler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > iPhoto is a bit of a dog though is you have thousands of > > images. I > > have it renamed to something else so it doesn't open every > > time I > > connect my memory card reader. > > > __________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > All your favorites on one personal page â Try My Yahoo! > http://my.yahoo.com > > -- Juan Buhler http://www.jbuhler.com blog at http://www.jbuhler.com/blog

