

I came into a shop that has had explosive growth and the system used here was antiquated to say the least.
#HOUDAHGEO WINDOWS SOFTWARE#
Your software was one of my 1st purchases. Now I am running a prep department at another shop. That was at the last print shop I worked at. "I originally found your software hunting for something to catalog our CDs we used for archiving. It is obvious to me that you know what you are doing." Jeroen B, Netherlands The latter of course is essential, and is where some others are sadly lacking. Amazingly rich functionally, very easy to use, and extremely robust and careful with my data. “I use NeoFinder exclusively as a Digital Assets Manager to keep track of my nearly 800,000 jpeg files spread over 3 hard disks ranging in size from 4 to 8 TB." Marvyn S. I feel that NeoFinder’s speed and versatility makes work more efficient and more pleasant." David L. I appreciate NeoFinder’s ability to reference all file types. “I find that it is more efficient to catalogue files in a dedicated cataloguing program than in, for example, a raw photo developer. "I'm running it as our main studio filing system for hundreds of CDs in our archives and I just wanted to say that I am really pleased with it." Jonathan J, Australia No other program I've tried can search through that many images so quickly or easily." Cliff D. It's a great way to quickly search through my catalog of 300,000+ images. "First off, I want to say that I love NeoFinder. Thank you for creating such a fantastic program." Gary K. We have stored almost a quarter million images on those disks. Your program has made me look like a hero for finding and locating long forgotten images.
#HOUDAHGEO WINDOWS FULL#
“Since we started cataloging our binders full of CDs/DVDs of images, we now have over 700 catalogs of CDs, mainly DVDs of our collection.
#HOUDAHGEO WINDOWS HOW TO#
Just open the context menu for a photo (as shown above), and select Flickr or any of the other services.īut wait, there is more! You can even extend the menu that NeoFinder shows for yourself! The NeoFinder Users Guide will tell you how to accomplish that. With NeoFinder, you can even display a GPS location in Flickr, Panoramio, Google Maps, MapQuest, SmugMug, WikiMapia, Yahoo Maps, Geody, OpenStreetMap. Show the location of a photo on web sites NeoFinder even stores the IPTC caption, important EXIF camera data, and a thumbnail of your photos in that KMZ file, making it perfect to send friends vacation photos, for example. Of course, you can use NeoFinder to create a universal KMZ file with the GPS tags of one or multiple selected photos, and later use that in either Google Earth or any other KMZ enabled application. This requires Google Earth 4 or newer to be installed on your computer. If you select "Show Geotag (GPS) in -> Google Earth", NeoFinder will then ask Google Earth 4 to display that location: Just select the photo in NeoFinder, and open the contextual menu for the item: Done!!Īnd NeoFinder will immediately show all photos taken at this section of the world!Īlso, with NeoFinder, you can even let Google Earth 4 show you where that photo was taken. To do that, simply move the map to the area you wish to search. The most amazing and unique ability of NeoFinder allows you to display all photos taken in any area of the map. The GPS photo data in NeoFinder will be displayed in the Inspector, in the EXIF (Photo Info) section: With NeoFinder, you can even search for other photos taken near a location, or display the GPS location in Flickr, Panoramio, Google Maps, MapQuest, SmugMug, WikiMapia, Yahoo Maps, Geody, OpenStreetMap. NeoFinder is able to catalog that embedded GPS information and actually uses it in the innovative GeoFinder. To add the geotags to your existing photos, just use NeoFinder itself, or the excellent HoudahGeo software, which can also be used to pair GPX and NMEA track files to new photos. įortunately, there are some hardware attachments for certain SLR cameras (some Nikon and Canon models, and the Fujifilm S5pro) lately, from Dawntech and Solmeta, which add the GPS information directly when shooting (available from and others) These are standard geographic locations, or GPS coordinates for photo files, and the process of adding these is called geotagging or geocoding.
