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 experimenta
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 i
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/
> http://appliworks.jondesign
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 stil
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
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