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0001 msgid "" 0002 msgstr "" 0003 "Project-Id-Version: Digikam Manual 8.0.0\n" 0004 "Report-Msgid-Bugs-To: \n" 0005 "POT-Creation-Date: 2023-12-02 00:35+0000\n" 0006 "PO-Revision-Date: 2022-12-29 23:26-0800\n" 0007 "Last-Translator: Japanese KDE translation team <kde-jp@kde.org>\n" 0008 "Language-Team: Japanese <kde-jp@kde.org>\n" 0009 "Language: ja\n" 0010 "MIME-Version: 1.0\n" 0011 "Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8\n" 0012 "Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n" 0013 "Plural-Forms: nplurals=1; plural=0;\n" 0014 "X-Accelerator-Marker: &\n" 0015 "X-Text-Markup: kde4\n" 0016 0017 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:1 0018 msgid "Overview to Digital Asset Management" 0019 msgstr "" 0020 0021 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:1 0022 msgid "" 0023 "digiKam, documentation, user manual, photo management, open source, free, " 0024 "learn, easy, digital, asset, management" 0025 msgstr "" 0026 0027 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:14 0028 msgid "Overview" 0029 msgstr "" 0030 0031 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:16 0032 msgid "Contents" 0033 msgstr "" 0034 0035 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:19 0036 msgid "Introduction" 0037 msgstr "" 0038 0039 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:21 0040 msgid "" 0041 "Can you find your digital photographs when you need them? Or do you spend " 0042 "more time sifting through your hard drive and file cabinets than you would " 0043 "like? Do you have a systematic approach for assigning and tracking content " 0044 "data on your photos? If you make a living as a photographer, do your images " 0045 "bear your copyright and contact information, or do they circulate in the " 0046 "marketplace unprotected? Do you want your future grandchildren to admire " 0047 "your photographs you have taken yesterday? How do you ensure backup and the " 0048 "correctness of your data? How to prepare to change your computer, your hard " 0049 "disk, the software, the operating system and still manage to find your " 0050 "pictures or movies?" 0051 msgstr "" 0052 0053 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:24 0054 msgid "Definitions" 0055 msgstr "" 0056 0057 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:26 0058 msgid "" 0059 "Digital Asset Management (DAM) refers to every part of the process that " 0060 "follows the taking of the picture, all the way through the final output and " 0061 "permanent storage. Anyone who shoots, scans or stores digital photographs is " 0062 "practicing some form of DAM, but most of us are not doing so in a systematic " 0063 "or efficient way." 0064 msgstr "" 0065 0066 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:28 0067 msgid "A generic definition of DAM:" 0068 msgstr "" 0069 0070 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:30 0071 msgid "" 0072 "Digital Asset Management ingests, indexes, categorizes, secures, searches, " 0073 "transforms, assembles and exports content that has monetary or cultural " 0074 "value." 0075 msgstr "" 0076 0077 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:32 0078 msgid "And since we're at it another important one:" 0079 msgstr "" 0080 0081 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:34 0082 msgid "" 0083 "Metadata is defined as data about data. Metadata is definitional data that " 0084 "provides information about or documentation of other data managed within an " 0085 "application or environment." 0086 msgstr "" 0087 0088 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:36 0089 msgid "In our context here it stands for all information about a photograph." 0090 msgstr "" 0091 0092 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:39 0093 msgid "DAM and digiKam" 0094 msgstr "" 0095 0096 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:41 0097 msgid "" 0098 "In this section of the manual, we will present the **tools** and the " 0099 "**practical advices** on how to **file**, **find**, **protect** and **re-" 0100 "use** photographs, focusing on best practices for digital photographers " 0101 "using digiKam. We cover **downloading**, **renaming**, **culling**, " 0102 "**converting**, **grouping**, **backing-up**, **rating**, **tagging**, " 0103 "**archiving**, **optimizing**, **maintaining** and **exporting** item files." 0104 msgstr "" 0105 0106 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:43 0107 msgid "" 0108 "digiKam with its libraries and tools is a unique and comprehensive tool to " 0109 "cover most of DAM tasks, and it does it fast and transparently. Based on " 0110 "open standards on all fronts it will not confine you to a platform or " 0111 "application, rather it puts you into a fast track to manage and find your " 0112 "photographs and to move on if you so please to any other platform, " 0113 "application, system without losing any of your work be it as an occasional " 0114 "user, enthusiast or professional." 0115 msgstr "" 0116 0117 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:49 0118 msgid "" 0119 "digiKam :ref:`Advanced Search Tool <advanced_search>` Locating Several Items " 0120 "in Database by Photograph Properties" 0121 msgstr "" 0122 0123 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:51 0124 msgid "" 0125 "The one thing that differentiates the archiving capabilities of film versus " 0126 "digital is that with digital you can make as many new originals as you want. " 0127 "With film you only have one original. All copies will have a slightly lower " 0128 "quality, and both originals and copies are more or less slowly aging and " 0129 "disappearing. The only way to keep it *forever fresh* is to make a digital " 0130 "copy of it. And that is also the only way to protect it from all hazards." 0131 msgstr "" 0132 0133 #: ../../asset_management/dam_overview.rst:53 0134 msgid "" 0135 "Even if digital media today may last shorter than film it is just up to you " 0136 "to make new copies every year, 5, 10 years or whenever necessary, and to " 0137 "always keep at least 2-3 copies of the files, preferably in different " 0138 "physical locations. You never had that opportunity with film. It could " 0139 "always be damaged in a fire, floods or similar - or even be stolen. The good " 0140 "and bad news then is this: if you lose digital images/data it is only your " 0141 "own laxity." 0142 msgstr ""