![]() ![]() I pull them off ASAP, do the initial renaming, delete as many as possible, as soon as possible, do processing, then put them into the central gallery before the nightly backups get started.Īfter all that, if I want the photos on the phone, then I can pull them back to the external microSD "Photos// structure. I don't keep photos taken on the phone in the phone. I'd use sshfs from a Linux system, if I wasn't happy about moving them over immediately, which is what I do. ![]() Last edited by satimis June 5th, 2022 at 04:05 PM. In this way I know the negative images coming from which folder pad. I expect naming it in my way such as:-ĪA is the number labelled by me on the folder pad holding the negatives But on scanning film negatives I don't need the date. The front 20220321 is the date of shooting. When we shoot photos, the mobile phone (In my case Samsung Galaxy S9+) will assign each photo a serial number, such as But all such works are done in post editing. I have no problem renaming the photos, adding description etc. I've been burned before by 'photo management software' screwing all sorts of things up. Also, I try not to 100% trust the EXIF, so I want the most important aspects of metadata about any photo to be captured in the directory and file name. I go out of my way to keep the photos in order per event/date, since having a slideshow in order tells a different story than a slide show based just on content. I use a script to rename images, then group them together by subject and use geeqie's multiple-rename to add text. I can do it on the images after shooting but it'll take tedious time treading hundreds of images. I need to save the scanned negative images direct to the VM, for post-editing, because some filter plugins of GIMP unable to run on Ubuntu 20.04 desktop, the Host.īesides is there any way marking the serial numbers assigned to each shooting according to my way of marking, not allotted by the phone automatically. Then moved the saved negatives images from Gallery to Ubuntu 22.04 VM. I expect to save the scanned negatives images direct to Ubuntu 22.04 desktop VM, instead of saved on the phone. Shooting is remotely controlled on 22.04 desktop VM. I use the mobile phone to scan film negatives. Alternatively you may simply need to go to Settings -> Connected Devices in the phone and choose to allow file transfer, or however it's described.įor the very few times I need to do this I use an Android app called WiFi File Transfer though I use it only to move files (photos) from phone to computer I don't think you can do the moves in the other direction, ie, to the phone never tried so it may be possible.That is exactly what I'm planning to do. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |