Several of our members have run into problems using Adobe Lightroom to copy, save, and organize their photo files. So, as is the custom of the Cville Camera Club to let no problems go unsolved, we have asked Gene Runion--our resident LR guru--to do a workshop on the basics of using LR to accomplish these goals.
Lightroom was designed mainly as a database to organize and manage photo files, but several key concepts have to be understood and followed if you want to make the most of its impressive capabilities and to avoid making a confusing mess of things. This workshop will help you master those concepts and use LR as it was designed to be used.
Even our more experienced members may learn a few useful tricks to make their photo management go more smoothly. PSA Member. Starting Midori took 0. Like Epiphany, Midori's UI is nothing out of the ordinary. Below the main menu bar which, unlike in Epiphany, can be compacted into a button on the right side, giving a more streamlined interface are buttons to add a new tab, go back, go forwards, go to the next subpage, and reload the page.
Next to that is an address bar which doesn't have the cool features of the Epiphany address bar aside from the progress bar integration as well as searching, which is a little more limited. Next to that is a button to open the sidepanel. Next to that is a Yahoo! Next to that is a button to undo the closing of the last tab. I'm not really sure why these last three things are present; I don't think they're particularly necessary. Like Epiphany, Midori has extensions, but also like Epiphany, they are somewhat limited in number.
In fact, many of the extensions are common. Thankfully, the extensions come with Midori and don't need to be installed as part of a separate package. Midori took 0. YouTube took 1. The video took 1. My Gmail took 1. That was a real disappointment. The Cville gateway took 5. Das U-Blog by Prashanth took 3. TechDirt took 5. So what's the verdict? I would say that loading times and RAM usage between the two browsers are essentially a draw.
Midori did feel slightly snappier than Epiphany, though. Epiphany seems to have a few more extensions than Midori, but both include the most common ones, so it's not a huge deal. Given all that, the dealbreaker for me is that Midori couldn't load the full version of Gmail, which is important considering that, on Mozilla Firefox Gmail is my homepage and hence the one I will likely see most often. That seals the deal for Epiphany.
If you go to this site, be sure to play the introductory video, which will show what the course will cover and will preview the great teaching ability of Matt Kloskowski. Is the program now a subscription process like the Microsoft suite? I'm looking at the Best Buy site and see Photoshop creative cloud and Lightroom together for I also want to be able to edit some digital family videos at some point.
Is there one bundled program for photos and video that would be more cost effective or should I just look for different programs? Thanks, Dana Palmer. As for video, that's not included. I can't comment on Adobe's video offerings. Yes, Photoshop can do video edits as well. Adobe's flagship professional level for video is Premier.
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