mlunar

joined 2 years ago
[–] mlunar 2 points 10 months ago

Haha, I hear you! Some things are a lot harder than they have any right to be.

[–] mlunar 9 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Sorry if these are stupid questions.

Not at all! Thanks for taking an interest.

Does this only show these foss_photo_libraries and your local photos?

I'm not sure what you mean. foss_photo_libraries is a comparison table of different apps someone else maintains, but I thought it was a useful resource. The photos in the demo are a subset of the open images dataset and a couple of other samples that I picked for demo purposes.

If you install it locally you can point it to a folder and it should use each subfolder as an album, or you can configure custom albums.

Does it support jpegXL?

Yes actually, but I don't have many files to test it, so I'm not sure how well it works. If you do I'd be interested to hear how it works for you. It uses FFmpeg to on-the-fly convert anything it can't read natively.

I’d love a seamless zoom feature for images in the browser. I use imagus but I’d love if the popup window could zoom to be bigger than the browser window.

You can zoom by using the mouse wheel or by pinching to zoom if that's what you mean? You should be able to zoom pretty much as much as you want. If you're in the main view where the mouse wheel scrolls photos up and down you can hold Ctrl (Cmd?) to zoom instead.

[–] mlunar 23 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I'd say Immich has quite a few more features, with the primary focus of backing up your media from your mobile devices with a more "managed" approach (it takes care of storing and organizing the files).

Photofield is more minimalistic (both in terms of user interface and as an application) and more useful if you have an existing directory structure that you want to view as a gallery. It also pulls a few neat tricks to make it work smoothly with up to ~600k files.

See also the linked comparison for more details. It's mostly accurate, though video is a bit better with this release.

[–] mlunar 3 points 10 months ago

Ha, hiring only account managers 😅 It does have search and maps, but they are a bit rudimentary right now. Also I have to find some sample geolocated photos to put in the demo, it doesn't have any right now.

[–] mlunar 2 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Ah cool! Maybe the server broke for a sec? 🤷‍♂️

[–] mlunar 3 points 10 months ago (3 children)

Hmm, it seems to work for me. Which Android/Firefox version do you have?

[–] mlunar 26 points 10 months ago (3 children)

It's quite impressive how much the Immich folks have achieved in a relatively short period of time! I'm glad you found something that works for you :)

[–] mlunar 2 points 1 year ago

As already stated it's less about the facts being communicated and more about the way they're being communicated.

I would posit that the mismatch in the style of communication lead to you needing more time to clue in. And in that way, the initial feedback might have been an inefficient way to relay the point.

However it's also entirely possible that trying to package it in a better way, the point of the feedback-giver would have gotten lost, leading you not to clue in at all.

Communication is hard, especially tailoring it to the expected audience. That being said I don't think being an asshole is ever ok, unless it directly saves lives or something. 😅

[–] mlunar 2 points 1 year ago

There's probably no alternative as polished as that, but it's not too far off either. You can kinda search like that with photofield (disclaimer: I made it), but many other foss photo libraries also support semantic search by now, LibrePhotos for one.

[–] mlunar 4 points 1 year ago

Hi, those points are certainly valid and I have nothing against these picks!

I just wanted to chime in that perf might not be as big of a problem as you might expect. 5k/hour is 1.4/sec, which sqlite should for sure be able to handle.

In fact, you can do hundreds to thousands of writes/sec, as long as you batch them in transactions (as by default each query is executed in its own transaction).

[–] mlunar 1 points 1 year ago

You can, but only one can write at a time, which may or may not be a problem :)

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