Share Your
Photos With Friends, Family, and the World!
By Cate Eales
Appeared August 18, 2005 on castanet.net
Digital cameras now outsell film cameras. That suggests that there are
lots of us with hard drives full of images that we don't know we have and
can't always find when we need them!
What's the big deal? Well, whether you acquire your digital photos from a
digital camera, scanning actual prints, downloading them or having your
film camera prints put on a CD-ROM, you get a second chance at making
those photos better with your computer. Once you have digital photos, you
can do your own editing. You can crop them, you can make your own prints,
and you can email or upload the pictures you like for anyone you want to
see them.
It is easier than ever to organize and share you digital photos, and it
doesn't have to cost a lot of money. Most of us need something simple,
that will allow us to crop a thumb out of the picture, improve light and
shadow, and resize our digital photos. You can do all of that with
Irfanview (http://www.irfanview.com/),
which I have mentioned before.
However,
Picasa2, (http://picasa.google.com/index.html)
from the folks who brought us Google, does everything that Irfanview does,
and it's easy, with stunning results. There is an "I'm feeling lucky"
button, which improves most shots with one click. There are other fixes
that are easy to apply, including removing the dreaded red-eye, and
straightening up a picture that's crooked! And you can also apply effects.
Best of all, you can "undo" anything you do. When you get those photos the
way you like, you can make a slide show, a screen saver, a poster, or a
collage.
Picasa2 also organizes your photos into folders, and will keep track of
any new photos you add if you set it up that way. If you give those
folders descriptive names ("Vancouver Trip - 2005" or "Dog Beach")
suddenly you can find those pictures when you want them! You can give the
photos captions, and you can password protect confidential or sensitive
material, or exclude it from the folders Picasa2 monitors.
Now you're organized, and naturally you want to share those photos with
friends and family. What's the best way? If you want to share just one or
two photos, you probably want to email them. Resist the temptation to
email the giant file just as it comes out of your camera!!! It's good
manners to "optimize" a photo before you email it. That just means you
decrease the size of the photo and the resolution of the photo before you
send it. If you have Windows XP, you can click on "Email this file", and
Windows XP will optimize the photo for you. Picassa2 does this also,
regardless of what version of Windows you're using.
If you want to share lots of your photos, large or small file size, you
can upload them to a service like
Flickr (http://www.flickr.com/).
You can specify who will be able to see your photos by inviting certain
people, or you can share them with the world.
Of course, another way to share your photos is to print them. Printers and
photo paper that produce excellent quality prints for us amateur
photographers have become affordable. Windows XP makes it easy to print
different size photos. Picasa2 does a better job of this, in my opinion,
even allowing you to print more than one picture on a page.
So get out there, enjoy the good weather, and share those photos!
--
Cate Eales has been helping people make online computing safe, accessible
and fun for over 20 years. She lives in Kelowna with her husband, Eric,
and her dog, Sandy. Cate is a partner in Real Life Internet Solutions,
helping individuals and small businesses with virus, spyware and malware
eradication; personal computer training and management; digital image
management; music transfer; and website design, hosting and management.
Email Cate at cate@rlis.com with your comments, suggestions, or questions.
To browse the column archives, visit the Real Life Internet Solutions
website at www.rlis.com.
© Cate Eales 2005 - All Rights Reserved
Related links:
Irfanview:
http://www.irfanview.com/
Picasa2:
http://picasa.google.com/index.html
Flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/
Real Life Internet Solutions: http://rlis.com/