97 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
97 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4071
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Title: HPR4071: Migration to digiKam as Digital Asset Management (DAM)
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4071/hpr4071.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 19:15:39
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4171 from Monday 11th of March 2024.
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Today's show is entitled Migration to Digicum as Digital Asset Management Dam.
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It is the first show by Newhost Henrik Hemrin and is about 8 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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This summary is I describe how I migrated from Adobe Photoshop Elements.
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Welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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My name is Henrik Hemrin and this is my premier as host at Hacker Public Radio.
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I will talk about storage of digital photos and more specifically my migration from Adobe
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Photoshop Elements to Digicum as Photo Catalog Software.
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I use a Photo Catalog Software or DAM Digital Asset Management as it is often referred to.
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I started with Photoshop Our Boom maybe same year or soon after I bought my first digital camera in 2004.
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Photoshop Our Boom was a software that soon was incorporated into Adobe Photoshop Elements.
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I have then purchased several releases of Photoshop Elements.
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My latest and not unlikely the last purchase of Photoshop Elements was release 14 which I bought in 2015.
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Which also was when I migrated from Windows to Mac OS.
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Photoshop Elements is without hesitation a good software but one major drawback is that it is proprietary
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and I cannot export data from it on my conditions.
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After a few years geotagging stopped working in my Photoshop Elements 14.
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The error message told that this was caused by a change from Google.
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Adobe Photoshop Elements had the fix for this error but only incorporated in the next release of the software.
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No fixed was planned for my release so to get geotagging working again I would have to buy a new release of Photoshop Elements.
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This annoyed me.
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I waited to buy and I used ordinary tags with the geographic information as a workaround for time being.
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Over time I also got problem that it now and then crashed and needed to be restarted.
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It started to happen more often.
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It became more and more stressful and less attractive to work with my photos.
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Something needed to be done.
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I considered if I should buy a new release of Photoshop Elements or change to any other software.
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At the same time I also became more attracted to Linux and I also became more interested in free and open software.
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I was looking for a software possible available on all three platforms, Windows, MacOS and Linux.
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Adobe products are not available for Linux nor are they free and open source.
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So this rule out Photoshop Elements, Lightroom and Adobe and Photoshop from Adobe.
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A big drawback with changing from something else than Adobe is that I most certainly will lose some of the work I've put into the photos in Photoshop Elements.
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Firstly, the photo editing data and raw conversion settings for individual photos will be lost.
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This is almost impossible to migrate between softwares.
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What can be done is to save what I had edited as new photos of course.
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And I'm fine with this. I will not stop me from changing software.
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Secondly, it's about the metadata which is very important to me.
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Metadata contains not only information about the shooting from the camera itself,
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but also my tags, description, texts and more I have added in Photoshop Elements.
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Metadata also includes face tagging.
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This goes both for digital camera photos as well as digitized analog photos.
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So my criteria for my new software, one, preferable free and open source, two,
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available on multiple platforms, in particular available on Mac OS and Linux.
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Three, that metadata can be migrated, including face tagging.
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The one that I found to best meet my criteria is DigiCam.
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DigiCam is mostly known for its catalog capabilities,
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but DigiCam also includes import and export functions as well as raw conversion and photo editing.
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So some words about my migration.
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Photoshop Elements stores the data in a database.
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It is possible to export metadata to files and side costs, but not all data.
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Face tagging cannot be exported.
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The name of the person can be exported, but not the coordinates on the face tag,
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which is only stored in the database.
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And the database itself cannot be read by other software, except by Adobe software.
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Adobe Lightroom Classic can import the data from Photoshop Elements database directly into its own database.
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This was very important for my migration success.
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Lightroom has better export functions than Photoshop Elements and can export also face tagging.
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So I installed Lightroom Classic, available for free trial for some days,
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and exported the data from Photoshop Elements to Lightroom Classic.
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I discovered an issue with the time and date stamps.
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In Photoshop Elements, it's possible to give incomplete date and time.
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For example, state only year if I don't know all the details.
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Already, Lightroom had a problem to interpret this information correctly,
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and I had to implement a work around with tags.
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In general, several time and date attributes exist,
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and it is something to understand what is what and how each of them is defined, displayed and managed in each software.
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From Lightroom, I exported metadata, including face tags to files and sidecars.
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Now I was prepared to migrate to DigiCam.
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And migration to DigiCam worked, not 100% perfectly, but good enough.
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I migrated one and a half year ago in October 2022.
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I still have access to my Photoshop Elements database if I want to go back and check anything.
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In November or December 2023, I took the next step to migrate from DigiCam on MacOS to DigiCam on Linux.
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This migration was relatively easy.
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My current settings in DigiCam is to always write data to sidecars
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in addition to the DigiCam databases.
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So I copied the photo files and the sidecars from MacOS to Linux,
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and I took the opportunity to rearrange my folder structure,
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and then I imported into DigiCam and DigiCam
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built a new database in Linux based on photos and sidecars.
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Thank you for listening, take care and goodbye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts,
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an onsthost.com
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Internet Archive and R-Sync.net.
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On this otherwise stated, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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