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Ask HN: How do you organise photos?

2 pointsby barbequeerabout 1 year ago
Ever since I became a father a few years ago I have taken a lot of photos, and because local storage is cheap I tend to keep everything. I&#x27;m now in a situation where I have ~5GB of photos and videos of my kids per year going back a few years. I got into a habit of just backing up every single photo on the phone every few months, and removing the duplicates.<p>I&#x27;m finding managing and backing stuff up to be a bigger time sink. Managing and finding photos is tricky with such a large collection.<p>Is anyone else out there in the same boat? What solutions have you come up with?

5 comments

k310about 1 year ago
I took countless photos before tags existed, so I&#x27;m not about to retroactively tag and rename over 500 GB of photos.<p>It would help immensely to have some reasonable (not named Adobe or Google) software just to categorize photos on the computer.<p>As it stands, I only file photos into • Very Best, • Illustrations for posting, • Family, • Documents, • Home and property, and • Other (anonymous) and I use color tags to indicate what to review later after doing the &quot;upload from camera and quick scan&#x2F;adjustment&quot;. That takes a lot of my evening time, after the hiking around to get the photos. (mostly landscapes, flora, sunrises and sunsets at this time.)<p>I rename bulk folders when the SD card folder names roll over, so primary sort is on date and camera model or phone. But since it&#x27;s a manual sort, only the above.<p>Backups to spare disks from time to time.
t312227about 1 year ago
personally i use yearly folders + a sub-folder for the occasion :)<p>software: any common filemanager of your choice will do - be it GUI or text (for example midnight-commander :)<p>eg 2024&#x2F;some-place-or-important-event&#x2F;<p>btw. i know multiple people who organize their photos in this way and some of them have far larger collections than &quot;just&quot; 5 GB... ;))<p>just my 0.02€<p>ps. as with every &quot;important&quot; data, follow the well-known 3 - 2 - 1 rule for backups (at least: 3 generations, 2 different medias, one copy &quot;offsite&quot;)<p>for example i know someone losing their entire childrens photo-collection due to dropping an external hdd...
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pestatijeabout 1 year ago
i put them in yearly folders...if theres too many in one folder then maybe 2022grannyVisit, 2022easterHolidays, etc
brudgersabout 1 year ago
<i>and removing the duplicates</i><p>Not worrying about duplicates makes my photo management easier. [0]<p>But not worrying about culling changed everything for the better. [1]<p>Basically, I treat photographic storage as write-only. Since every digital photograph is tagged with a date when it is made, date is the primary key. Sure sometimes it&#x27;s wrong. So what? Being wrong is not going to launch the missiles.<p>Survival is why we manage photographs (otherwise we would just delete them and make our life easier). Dealing with duplicates and poor images when searching&#x2F;viewing is a distant second. It is not the thing to optimize around (outside of commercial uses).<p>Deduplicating and culling are massively time consuming, require mental focus and our mistake prone. The mistakes are not just technical the are aesthetic and editorial. Editorial mistakes are of the &quot;Now that they are dead I wish I had more pictures of them&quot; variety.<p>Aesthetic mistakes are because my current aesthetic judgement is worse than my future aesthetic judgement...or my current aesthetic judgement is better than my past aesthetic judgement. I went through a period where I took a 25k photos a year and rated them all. In the years since, many many of those ratings were naive. Lower rated pictures are often much better than higher rated ones.<p>Thankfully I kept the lower rated ones and bought more storage to solve that problem. [2]<p>Good luck.<p>[0] The more copies you have the more likely an image is to survive.<p>[1] The only culling I do is of total garbage (e.g. the lens cap was on) and then only sometimes because usually it doesn&#x27;t matter.<p>[2] and fortunately I don&#x27;t do much video because then culling and deduplicating is economically more important.
macartainabout 1 year ago
Really badly - I was a huge fan of piacasa, basic though it was, until those grifters at google canned it so that I had to send all my photos to their DC. Now I have a horribly fractured collection across phone uploads, a NAS backend and some scattered portable HDs. Looking for that wet weekend to combine them all, at least from a storage perspective. But as to what I use to index them, I have just never found a replacement I liked, paid or otherwise. Looking forward to your responses.
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