I'm now moving my first steps in trying to memorize my many digital
photos (for the time being some 700 pictures but rapifdly growing,
average size among 800-900kb) in a centralised system easy to deal
with. I'm now successfully (but still in an experimental level) using
a postgresql 8.0.2
Vittorio schreef:
I'm now moving my first steps in trying to memorize my many digital
photos (for the time being some 700 pictures but rapifdly growing,
average size among 800-900kb) in a centralised system easy to deal
with. I'm now successfully (but still in an experimental level) using
In response to Vittorio [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I'm now moving my first steps in trying to memorize my many digital
photos (for the time being some 700 pictures but rapifdly growing,
average size among 800-900kb) in a centralised system easy to deal
with. I'm now successfully (but still in an
Op dinsdag 10 april 2007, schreef Bill Moran:
Hi,
I was at a LUG meeting where a number of these were presented recently, and
I'll be damned if I can remember any software names ... Here are some that
I found during some googling:
http://gpc.sourceforge.net/
You can use MySQL or any other relational database to cross-reference/catalog
storage locations and information about a large quantity of items/data such as
pictures.
IMHO, to make such a project worthwhile, you need a database design that serves
your needs. If you don't want to design/develop
Vittorio [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I'm now moving my first steps in
trying to memorize my many digital
photos (for the time being some 700 pictures but rapifdly growing,
average size among 800-900kb) in a centralised system easy to deal
with. I'm now successfully (but still in an experimental