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0001 # translation of docs_digikam_org_asset_management___organize_find.po to Slovak
0002 # Roman PaholĂ­k <wizzardsk@gmail.com>, 2023.
0003 msgid ""
0004 msgstr ""
0005 "Project-Id-Version: docs_digikam_org_asset_management___organize_find\n"
0006 "Report-Msgid-Bugs-To: \n"
0007 "POT-Creation-Date: 2023-12-02 00:35+0000\n"
0008 "PO-Revision-Date: 2023-03-19 10:11+0100\n"
0009 "Last-Translator: Roman Paholik <wizzardsk@gmail.com>\n"
0010 "Language-Team: Slovak <kde-sk@linux.sk>\n"
0011 "Language: sk\n"
0012 "MIME-Version: 1.0\n"
0013 "Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8\n"
0014 "Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n"
0015 "X-Generator: Lokalize 22.12.3\n"
0016 "Plural-Forms: nplurals=3; plural=(n==1) ? 0 : (n>=2 && n<=4) ? 1 : 2;\n"
0017 
0018 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:1
0019 msgid "Build a System to Organize and Find Your Photographs"
0020 msgstr ""
0021 
0022 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:1
0023 msgid ""
0024 "digiKam, documentation, user manual, photo management, open source, free, "
0025 "learn, easy, hierarchy, tags, rating, captions, geolocation, date, albums, "
0026 "filenames, versioning, exporting"
0027 msgstr ""
0028 
0029 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:14
0030 msgid "Organize and Find"
0031 msgstr ""
0032 
0033 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:16
0034 msgid "Contents"
0035 msgstr "Obsah"
0036 
0037 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:18
0038 msgid ""
0039 "We dare-say if you have more than 1000 photographs on your computer in no-"
0040 "DAM fashion it takes you too long to find any particular image. And if you "
0041 "don't know how many images are in your files you're surely not using "
0042 "digiKam. The dual approach to store metadata in a database and in the image "
0043 "files guarantees ultra fast searching and secure archiving freely accessible "
0044 "to other applications, platforms and formats."
0045 msgstr ""
0046 
0047 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:20
0048 msgid ""
0049 "But as much as there is no such thing as a free lunch, there is no free "
0050 "cataloging or DAM - those who spend the initial time of building a "
0051 "systematic method of their own will be better off as time passes and the "
0052 "number of photographs multiplies. The ROI (return on investment) of DAM has "
0053 "been estimated in different studies to be better than 10. Keep in mind to be "
0054 "**concise, plan for the future (30-50y)**, do it once. The upcoming semantic "
0055 "web will totally integrate into and add value to a DAM environment."
0056 msgstr ""
0057 
0058 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:23
0059 msgid "Use-Cases with digiKam"
0060 msgstr ""
0061 
0062 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:25
0063 msgid ""
0064 "digiKam provides a number of methods to classify photographs: filenames, "
0065 "albums, collections, time-stamp, tags, rating, GPS position and captions. As "
0066 "if this was not enough, you can search many standard metadata items like "
0067 "camera model, lens, coordinates, image size and many more. Metadata "
0068 "categories as listed here are in fact different **views** of your photo "
0069 "library. Combining these views is the very powerful method to narrow down "
0070 "the search for a file and to find it quickly. Imagine having 800 photos of "
0071 "your loved one. Searching for **Salagou**, having more than **3 rating "
0072 "stars**, shot in **France** will surely leave you with very few candidates. "
0073 "In terms of selection criteria for a DAM system, digiKam fares very well in "
0074 "terms of completeness, versatility, speed, scalability, accuracy and "
0075 "openness."
0076 msgstr ""
0077 
0078 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:31
0079 msgid ""
0080 "A :ref:`Geolocation Search <mapsearch_view>` Results in France :ref:"
0081 "`Filtered <filters_view>` by a String and Rating Value"
0082 msgstr ""
0083 
0084 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:33
0085 msgid ""
0086 "The key thing to remember is that you don't know how you or somebody else "
0087 "will try to find an image 2 years ahead of our time. You will remember past "
0088 "events in a different context, it's a fact of life. So if you can narrow "
0089 "down your search by remembering place or time or camera or theme or rating "
0090 "or owner you stand an infinitely better chance to find it quickly than by "
0091 "just one of those criteria or none. At the beginning, at the time of taking "
0092 "a photograph, all metadata is in your head (except for the Exif data). If "
0093 "you do not transcribe some of it into your DAM system, it will be lost "
0094 "eventually as much as every event fades into oblivion over time."
0095 msgstr ""
0096 
0097 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:35
0098 msgid ""
0099 "One distinction has to be interjected here between **private** and **public "
0100 "metadata**. One could say that all file-embedded attributes are potentially "
0101 "public since the images may be exported, sold, and copied to other places "
0102 "and people. On the other hand all non-embedded metadata in the database can "
0103 "be considered private as they stay in the database and go nowhere else. By "
0104 "adjusting digiKam's settings accordingly you can control what kind of data "
0105 "remains private and what will be embedded and eventually become public."
0106 msgstr ""
0107 
0108 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:38
0109 msgid "Folders Organization"
0110 msgstr ""
0111 
0112 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:40
0113 msgid ""
0114 "The first thing to do and to know before you put anything onto your system "
0115 "is to build an information structure (as opposed to data structure). Your "
0116 "image files have to be somehow organized within the computer, you have to "
0117 "decide if others should have access to your photographs (sharing), if you "
0118 "put them on a dedicated drive, on a network drive etc. Keep in mind that you "
0119 "have to migrate one day onto some bigger volume."
0120 msgstr ""
0121 
0122 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:42
0123 msgid ""
0124 "The organization should be simple, unified and scalable, and it should be "
0125 "independent of the storage medium on which you host them. In others words, "
0126 "the folders organization must be the physical information layout. Do not "
0127 "make the folders too small, several thousand images in one folder is not too "
0128 "much to ask for, but keep them small enough so that they can fit into a "
0129 "backup medium like an optical drive. Remember that the archive will grow all "
0130 "the time. The concrete type of structure depends on your use case of course: "
0131 "Lets take a simple yet frequent example: you are a casual photographer "
0132 "taking pictures of your private life, your family, holidays and so on. It "
0133 "could be efficient to create a structure based on years plus some holiday "
0134 "and export containers. It could look like this:"
0135 msgstr ""
0136 
0137 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:56
0138 msgid ""
0139 "Maybe you'll be happy with this structure. Holiday pictures can be quickly "
0140 "found by its location (unless you go to the same place every year), the rest "
0141 "will be organized by date. If you shoot enough pictures you want to create "
0142 "sub folders below the years as months e.g. 2008-01, 2008-02 etc. *Export* "
0143 "would be a container for images to print or to put onto a website."
0144 msgstr ""
0145 
0146 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:58
0147 msgid ""
0148 "The more professional photographer will have very different needs as there "
0149 "will be versions of photographs, archives, workflows, a constant influx of "
0150 "images of diverging themes, and a large quantity of everything. Within 10 "
0151 "year you'll have 95% archives and 5% work space files and you don't want to "
0152 "organize your structure around content."
0153 msgstr ""
0154 
0155 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:60
0156 msgid "The consideration are these:"
0157 msgstr ""
0158 
0159 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:62
0160 msgid ""
0161 "What kind of files go together? Segregation of file type makes batch "
0162 "processing easier. Keep new and old files separate."
0163 msgstr ""
0164 
0165 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:64
0166 msgid "How can you make that structure scalable?"
0167 msgstr ""
0168 
0169 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:66
0170 msgid ""
0171 "Segregation of original and working files makes it easier to allocate the "
0172 "backup strategy and migration. You will always know if you look for an "
0173 "original or a derivative."
0174 msgstr ""
0175 
0176 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:72
0177 msgid ""
0178 "The digiKam :ref:`Import Tool <advanced_import>` Allows to Create Albums and "
0179 "Rename Files Based on Items Properties"
0180 msgstr ""
0181 
0182 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:75
0183 msgid "Automatic Metadata"
0184 msgstr ""
0185 
0186 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:77
0187 msgid ""
0188 "How to go about all this metadata business? Firstly, there are already a lot "
0189 "of **automatically generated metadata**: Exif data and Makernotes. If you "
0190 "have configured digiKam with your identity section all imported images will "
0191 "be imprinted with this data set which includes copyrights, all automatic. If "
0192 "you have a GPS track recorded in parallel to your taking the photographs, "
0193 "you can geolocate those images in a single action using the Geolocation "
0194 "tool. Even if you brought back 1000 images from a shooting session, so far "
0195 "you'll not have spent more than 10 minutes to do all that."
0196 msgstr ""
0197 
0198 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:79
0199 msgid ""
0200 "And by now you have all camera settings of every shot, lens data like zoom, "
0201 "focus, aperture etc., date and time, shooting location, copyrights, "
0202 "authorship, program used, and more. Not bad, isn't it? But we could have "
0203 "done more during the importing, we could have changed the file names to "
0204 "include the date, or place or theme, we could have changed the format to a "
0205 "lossless 16 bit per channel format, we could have automatically separated "
0206 "JPEG and RAW files into their folders."
0207 msgstr ""
0208 
0209 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:85
0210 msgid ""
0211 "digiKam Propose a Hierarchical View of :ref:`Shooting Dates <dates_view>` "
0212 "Which can be Exported Easily to a Remote Web Service"
0213 msgstr ""
0214 
0215 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:87
0216 msgid ""
0217 "We actually recommend to auto-rename to match an event, a place or a theme. "
0218 "digiKam provides all date/calendar related grouping so that there's hardly a "
0219 "need for coding the date into the file name. Unless you'd like to do just "
0220 "that to browse your albums with another application that is not calendar "
0221 "savvy. You will buy a new camera one day or you have a second one already, "
0222 "sooner than you believe. The numbering scheme of that new camera will start "
0223 "over at typically IMG_0001.JPG again, creating identical file names to the "
0224 "ones you have already if you do not rename them. By renaming you lessen the "
0225 "chance of inadvertently overwriting them at a later date. Keep the new names "
0226 "clean, use alphanumerics, dashes, underscores and a single period prior to "
0227 "the file extension."
0228 msgstr ""
0229 
0230 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:89
0231 msgid ""
0232 "We also recommend to switch-on the **Save Metadata** options in the :ref:"
0233 "`digiKam settings page for metadata <metadata_settings>`. This will ensure "
0234 "that Exif, IPTC and XMP information is written into the file. If you forgot "
0235 "to do that you can always catch up by copying the metadata in the database "
0236 "to the files in one go (from the **Album** menu)."
0237 msgstr ""
0238 
0239 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:95
0240 msgid "The digiKam Metadata Workflow Settings Panel"
0241 msgstr ""
0242 
0243 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:97
0244 msgid ""
0245 "Now we have a lot of stuff already in our database, but what if we need to "
0246 "change some of it? digiKam provides a :ref:`Metadata Editor "
0247 "<metadata_editor>` for a selected number of attributes, the most important "
0248 "ones of course."
0249 msgstr ""
0250 
0251 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:103
0252 msgid ""
0253 "The digiKam :ref:`Metadata Editor <metadata_editor>` Modify XMP Properties"
0254 msgstr ""
0255 
0256 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:105
0257 msgid ""
0258 "The real work begins here as we will apply **Tags**, **Captions** and a "
0259 "**Rating** to every photograph. Of course, all images requiring the same "
0260 "attribute can be treated as a selection in one action. Lets start with "
0261 "rating or ranking. It's best to start with ranking because for further work "
0262 "you can concentrate on the good shots."
0263 msgstr ""
0264 
0265 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:109
0266 msgid ""
0267 "digiKam also provides **automatic tagging** features based on deep-learning:"
0268 msgstr ""
0269 
0270 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:111
0271 msgid ""
0272 ":ref:`Image Quality Sorting <maintenance_quality>` to assign automatically a "
0273 "**Pick Label** to item based on aesthetic factors."
0274 msgstr ""
0275 
0276 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:112
0277 msgid ""
0278 ":ref:`Face Detection <face_detection>` to detect faces on image and record "
0279 "areas on database."
0280 msgstr ""
0281 
0282 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:113
0283 msgid ""
0284 ":ref:`Face recognition <face_recognition>` to assign people tags "
0285 "automatically based on already tagged ones"
0286 msgstr ""
0287 
0288 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:119
0289 msgid ""
0290 "digiKam Maintenance Tool is The Best Way to Auto-tag items by :ref:`Quality "
0291 "<maintenance_quality>` or for :ref:`Faces <maintenance_faces>`"
0292 msgstr ""
0293 
0294 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:121
0295 msgid ""
0296 "These kind of tools requires extra data model files to run. digiKam will ask "
0297 "you to download models at first start."
0298 msgstr ""
0299 
0300 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:124
0301 msgid "Rating and Ranking"
0302 msgstr ""
0303 
0304 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:126
0305 msgid ""
0306 "A ranking systematic is implemented in digiKam by the 5 star rating tool. In "
0307 "fact there are 6 levels, zero through five stars (*) can be attributed (when "
0308 "saving them into IPTC metadata a translation of levels ensures compatibility "
0309 "with other programs). Rating is rapidly applied with digiKam using keyboard "
0310 "shortcuts or the mouse on single photographs or whole selections. The rating "
0311 "can then be entered as a search criterion or directly from the status bar "
0312 "quick filters."
0313 msgstr ""
0314 
0315 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:128
0316 msgid ""
0317 "However, before you start attributing stars everywhere take a moment to "
0318 "establish personal criteria for ranking. Best practice is to write down your "
0319 "personal match of stars to some qualitative expression, that will define "
0320 "what you actually mean when giving 5 stars. Generally there should be much "
0321 "less images rated with increasing star assignment. A ratio of 3-10 between "
0322 "each level has proven useful."
0323 msgstr ""
0324 
0325 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:134
0326 msgid "The Edit :ref:`Rating Properties <labels_edit>` From Thumb-bar"
0327 msgstr ""
0328 
0329 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:136
0330 msgid ""
0331 "That will get you quite far in distinguishing your rating pyramid. Say, you "
0332 "choose a ratio of 7 between levels. For every 5 star image you'll then have "
0333 "7 4 stars, 49 3 stars and so on, resulting in almost 20000 pictures. "
0334 "Amazing? Yes, and 16807 of them you didn't have to rate at all! You even can "
0335 "define a different rating scheme depending on the kind of use, 2 stars for "
0336 "commercial use, may mean something else than 2 stars holiday photos. It is "
0337 "also a good practice to define a neutral rating, everything below is "
0338 "actually a negative rating."
0339 msgstr ""
0340 
0341 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:138
0342 msgid ""
0343 "This will help you culling and thinning your collection very efficiently. Or "
0344 "you could define purposes to ratings, like this:"
0345 msgstr ""
0346 
0347 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:140
0348 msgid "0 stars for *can throw away*."
0349 msgstr ""
0350 
0351 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:141
0352 msgid "1 star for images in quarantine (decide later)."
0353 msgstr ""
0354 
0355 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:142
0356 msgid "2 stars for gallery export."
0357 msgstr ""
0358 
0359 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:143
0360 msgid "3 stars for printing."
0361 msgstr ""
0362 
0363 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:144
0364 msgid "4 stars for selling."
0365 msgstr ""
0366 
0367 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:145
0368 msgid "5 stars for *have to work on*."
0369 msgstr ""
0370 
0371 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:147
0372 msgid ""
0373 "It must suit your needs. The following table illustrates a possible "
0374 "evolution for a professional photographer using a ranking ratio of roughly 7 "
0375 "over the next 12 years. It is evident that the good shots can be easily "
0376 "found, even within millions of photos."
0377 msgstr ""
0378 
0379 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:153
0380 msgid "The Rating Pyramid"
0381 msgstr ""
0382 
0383 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:155
0384 msgid ""
0385 "Lets continue with **Tags** (or keywords as called by other applications, or "
0386 "categories, they are all synonymous)."
0387 msgstr ""
0388 
0389 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:160
0390 msgid "Tagging and Keywords"
0391 msgstr ""
0392 
0393 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:162
0394 msgid ""
0395 "Tags are a hierarchical labeling system that you create as you add to it. "
0396 "The important thing to do is to create a system that suits your needs and "
0397 "habits. Are you a (semi) professional who wants to sell photographs to "
0398 "agencies, do you want to publish on a web gallery, or are you just the "
0399 "occasional amateur managing the visual family memory?"
0400 msgstr ""
0401 
0402 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:164
0403 msgid ""
0404 "For all these different use cases you want to design a tag structure that is "
0405 "adapted to it. If you configure it so, digiKam will write the whole "
0406 "hierarchy into XMP fields so that they can be used by your photographic "
0407 "agency using a different application of to automatically create **Title** "
0408 "and **Caption** for web exports. In any case it will serve you well to "
0409 "quickly find a specific picture again."
0410 msgstr ""
0411 
0412 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:170
0413 msgid ""
0414 "The digiKam Image Editor Assigning More Than One Tag at The Same Time "
0415 "Within :ref:`Right Sidebar <captions_view>`"
0416 msgstr ""
0417 
0418 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:172
0419 msgid ""
0420 "The hierarchy will provide you with automatic groupings. For example, if you "
0421 "start a typical private use hierarchy with *Activities*, *People*, *Places*, "
0422 "*Themes* and *Projects* on the top level, everything you tag with a sub-tag "
0423 "of these will be grouped together into a virtual album. digiKam has a "
0424 "dedicated view in the left sidebar for these virtual albums. But it comes "
0425 "even better."
0426 msgstr ""
0427 
0428 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:174
0429 msgid ""
0430 "As you continue adding sub-tags into the hierarchies, not only will you be "
0431 "able to search and quick-filter for them, the right sidebar tag filter "
0432 "allows you to select combinations of tag groups. Lets say in the left "
0433 "sidebar tag panel you select the virtual album *People* and you have 12 "
0434 "different tags for people in there, then you can combine it with the right "
0435 "sidebar and just choose *Peter*, *Paul* and *Mary* out of the 12."
0436 msgstr ""
0437 
0438 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:180
0439 msgid "The digiKam :ref:`Tag Properties Dialog <managing_tags>`"
0440 msgstr ""
0441 
0442 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:182
0443 msgid ""
0444 "In the long run you will not remember the details of your pictures and their "
0445 "subject (essentially the metadata in your brain will break down). It is "
0446 "therefore paramount that you **choose general and generic categories**. You "
0447 "will always remember that a particular shot was set at a river bank in a "
0448 "country or continent (aka river, continent), but you'll have forgotten which "
0449 "river it was. Instead of only tagging it with *Okavango* you tag it with "
0450 "river/Africa or river/South Africa. The details you can either put into a "
0451 "tag as well or into the **Captions**. A trick may help you: How would you "
0452 "search for that river with an Internet search engine? That's the way to go!"
0453 msgstr ""
0454 
0455 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:184
0456 msgid ""
0457 "Another categorization might be task-oriented as in *print jobs*, *web "
0458 "export*, *personal*, *galleryXYZ*, *clients*, *slideshow*, etc. Create "
0459 "groups as you need them but not more, you should be able to remember by "
0460 "heart the top level tags at least, otherwise the differentiation will become "
0461 "useless. Don't forget that you have all the other attributes to narrow down "
0462 "the search. The right sidebar tag filter combines with any view of left "
0463 "sidebar (albums, calendar, timeline, tag and search). This workflow "
0464 "categorizations can be easily delegated to **Color Labels** in digiKam."
0465 msgstr ""
0466 
0467 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:190
0468 msgid ""
0469 "The digiKam :ref:`Color Labels <labels_view>` Can be Used to Group Items For "
0470 "Your Workflow Stages"
0471 msgstr ""
0472 
0473 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:192
0474 msgid ""
0475 "Another digiKam feature is the **Pick Labels** used to categorize shots by "
0476 "quality and identify which item will be **Rejected**, **Pending**, or "
0477 "**Accepted** in your workflow. You can assign this kind of properties "
0478 "manually of course, but there is a better solution: delegate the quality "
0479 "analysis to the computer using the deep-learning based tool named **Image "
0480 "Quality Sorter**. This one can parse image feature as noise, blur, form, "
0481 "shape, contents, etc, and give an evaluation of the quality of shot. This "
0482 "tool is available in **Maintenance Tool** and in **Batch Queue Manager**."
0483 msgstr ""
0484 
0485 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:198
0486 msgid ""
0487 "The digiKam Pick Labels can be Assigned Automatically Depending of the  :ref:"
0488 "`Quality of Shot in Batch Queue Manager <bqm_qualitysort>`"
0489 msgstr ""
0490 
0491 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:200
0492 msgid ""
0493 "When you import cataloged images from other sources having embedded tags "
0494 "already, digiKam will automatically create the trees for you, respectively "
0495 "insert it into the right place. Rearranging the hierarchy within the tree is "
0496 "no problem, you can do that easily by dragging and dropping a sub-tree to "
0497 "another place in the hierarchy. The changed tags will be updated as digiKam "
0498 "ripples down the branches."
0499 msgstr ""
0500 
0501 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:202
0502 msgid ""
0503 "The graphics here shows how different digiKam item properties overlap. This "
0504 "is a very coarse representation, as each block of metadata will in itself be "
0505 "subdivided into many sections. **File-names** and **Files-dates** data are "
0506 "properties of all images taken from files-system."
0507 msgstr ""
0508 
0509 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:208
0510 msgid "The Different Item Properties Available in digiKam"
0511 msgstr ""
0512 
0513 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:210
0514 msgid ""
0515 "Enough of **Tags**. Lets move on to **Captions** or **Comments**, the third "
0516 "major tool for metadata cataloging."
0517 msgstr ""
0518 
0519 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:215
0520 msgid "Captions and Comments"
0521 msgstr ""
0522 
0523 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:217
0524 msgid ""
0525 "This is already the 4th kind of metadata we present here. What is the "
0526 "distinction of **Captions** compared to **Tags** (*comments* can be used "
0527 "synonymously, but the IPTC vocabulary stipulates the term *caption*), "
0528 "keywords? Where **Tags** owe to a hierarchical and generalized description, "
0529 "**Captions** are the opposite: prose description, details, anecdotal stuff. "
0530 "Tags foremostly serve the finding, retrieval and grouping of assets, whereas "
0531 "captions shall entertain, inform, touch the beholder."
0532 msgstr ""
0533 
0534 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:219
0535 msgid ""
0536 "Naturally they can also be used to filter the catalog, but this is just a "
0537 "byproduct. Captions are to remember the story, the event, the emotions, it's "
0538 "what makes photographs much more interesting to look at, captions put "
0539 "photographs into a context and meaning. If the pictures are an aesthetic "
0540 "statement, caption should be the emotional and informational complement."
0541 msgstr ""
0542 
0543 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:221
0544 msgid ""
0545 "You rarely want nobody to see your photographs. You rather want to share "
0546 "them with friends, your family, other photographers, agencies, put them onto "
0547 "the Internet. And don't tell me you're not interested as to how your photos "
0548 "are being received!"
0549 msgstr ""
0550 
0551 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:223
0552 msgid ""
0553 "So you might have the most beautiful portrait, sunset or landscape and "
0554 "nobody seems to care. Why is that? Look at some good photographs yourself "
0555 "without reading the title, comment or background information. How many of "
0556 "you are interested in depth of field, exposure time, white balance etc.? "
0557 "Some, of course. But anybody will be interested in the story the pictures "
0558 "tell, you want to remember a photograph, meaningless images bombard us too "
0559 "much anyways. You have to give the viewer something that explains it all."
0560 msgstr ""
0561 
0562 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:225
0563 msgid ""
0564 "Lets look at this panorama. From far it is not even a nice beach panorama. "
0565 "If you go closer you start to see some details, people, the space."
0566 msgstr ""
0567 
0568 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:231
0569 msgid ""
0570 "digiKam Editing Panorama :ref:`Title From Captions Sidebar "
0571 "<comment_editors>` Tab Within Image Editor"
0572 msgstr ""
0573 
0574 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:233
0575 msgid ""
0576 "And now we tell you that this is the Allies landing site *Omaha Beach* in "
0577 "the French Normandie 60 years after the disembarkation. One starts to dream, "
0578 "have associations, memories, the historical time span is present, you may "
0579 "hear the silence. The **Caption** has totally reframed to perception of this "
0580 "panorama."
0581 msgstr ""
0582 
0583 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:235
0584 msgid ""
0585 "For others to appreciate your photographs, the **Title** is probably more "
0586 "important than the image itself for the interest it creates. When you show "
0587 "pictures, tell a story. Remember that the key is to convey the meaning to "
0588 "viewers, to help them understand what you understand about the subject and "
0589 "what moved you."
0590 msgstr ""
0591 
0592 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:237
0593 msgid "Let people know what you understand about the subject, why you love it."
0594 msgstr ""
0595 
0596 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:239
0597 msgid "Create a red line between the photographs."
0598 msgstr ""
0599 
0600 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:241
0601 msgid "Oppose or relate them to different epochs."
0602 msgstr ""
0603 
0604 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:243
0605 msgid "Take notes shortly after shooting to remember."
0606 msgstr ""
0607 
0608 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:245
0609 msgid "Contemplate, research, watch, and talk - but mostly listen."
0610 msgstr ""
0611 
0612 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:247
0613 msgid ""
0614 "It's okay if the image is less than perfect because it has the strength to "
0615 "stand on its own merit described in the **caption**."
0616 msgstr ""
0617 
0618 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:249
0619 msgid ""
0620 "With digiKam you can enter unlimited amounts of text using internationalized "
0621 "alphabet (UTF-8) as caption. You can enter it for a selection of photos at "
0622 "the same time. When you export images to web services, the captions will be "
0623 "exported at choice into either/or/and caption/title of the web gallery "
0624 "system, no need to re-write the story for publishing."
0625 msgstr ""
0626 
0627 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:252
0628 msgid "Geolocation and Geo-tagging"
0629 msgstr ""
0630 
0631 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:254
0632 msgid ""
0633 "Do you still remember the times before GPS? When you would find your way to "
0634 "another city without navigation system? Wasn't the earth a dull blue ball "
0635 "before Google Earth? Well then, with images, the train of spatial "
0636 "representation is running at cruising speed alright."
0637 msgstr ""
0638 
0639 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:256
0640 msgid ""
0641 "A few cameras have a GPS receiver built-in, the images come tagged with 3-"
0642 "dimensional coordinates. And with almost any GPS device you're able to "
0643 "extract a trace (of course the receiver needs to be switched-on and carried "
0644 "with you whilst taking the photographs, and for good matching the camera "
0645 "time must be accurately set) and save it onto a computer. You have to store "
0646 "it in GPX format, that's easily done with `gpsbabel <https://www.gpsbabel."
0647 "org/>`_, gpsman and other tools."
0648 msgstr ""
0649 
0650 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:258
0651 msgid ""
0652 "You then can automatically match a whole bunch of photos with that track "
0653 "using digiKam. The coordinates are written into the JFIF part of JPG files "
0654 "(settings choice) and into the database. digiKam will enable searches based "
0655 "on locations and coordinates, you can create virtual albums of geographical "
0656 "areas! In the right sidebar under the metadata tab you'll find your image "
0657 "located on a local zoom of the world map. A further click brings on anyone "
0658 "of several mapping services on the web, zooming in on details. Even if you "
0659 "don't have a GPS trace you can geo-tag multiple images with a geo-editor. "
0660 "Just navigate on the map to the spot of shooting and click to fix it as a "
0661 "geo-tag."
0662 msgstr ""
0663 
0664 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:264
0665 msgid ""
0666 "digiKam Editing Geolocation and Processing :ref:`Reverse Geocoding "
0667 "<geoeditor_reverse>` with OpenStreetMap"
0668 msgstr ""
0669 
0670 #: ../../asset_management/organize_find.rst:266
0671 msgid ""
0672 "The possibilities of exploiting this geolocation are already innumerable and "
0673 "will become pervasive in the future. I'm sure one day not too far away we "
0674 "can revisit in a virtual reality our travels through geo-tagged pictures. "
0675 "The digiKam features include :ref:`exporting to KML files "
0676 "<geoeditor_kmlexport>` that can be opened by GoogleEarth (which in turn will "
0677 "show the photos on their shooting site), exporting to Piwigo, Google Photo, "
0678 "Flickr etc. with OpenStreetMap viewer and more."
0679 msgstr ""