Coppermine Photo Gallery
Coppermine is a free photo gallery software package that webmasters can download and install on their own websites. Coppermine is a multi-purpose fully-featured and integrated web picture gallery script written in PHP using GD or ImageMagick as an image library with a MySQL backend. Coppermine is free software that you can download and install on your web space. Arrangement of pictures in categories and albums, picture information stored in database, users can upload pictures with web interface or ftp (and admin can batch-add to database), full multimedia support, creation of thumbnails and intermediate size pics, search feature, last added, random picture, user management (private galleries, groups), integration of user management with various bbs (like phpBB, YaBB SE, SMF, Invisionboard, bulletin). Caption, title, description and user defined fields for each picture (searchable).
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Renamify
Instantly locate any photo in your collection. Privacy first, your photos are never shared with anyone. Easily upload multiple photos at once with a bulk upload. Completely free to use with no hidden charges. We use AI to automatically rename your photos and organize them into albums. Download your photos to your phone straight after. Your photos, your privacy. We do not store or use them for training. Our AI model is updated regularly to improve its accuracy. Utilize the file timeline and smart search to find your photos quickly. Renamify is an AI-powered file renaming tool that helps you organize and manage your image files more efficiently. Renamify uses advanced AI algorithms to analyze your image files and suggest meaningful names based on their content, metadata, and context. We take data security very seriously. All files are processed securely, and we do not store any of your personal files on our servers.
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Grid
Open-sourcing Grid, the Guardian’s new image management service. This is the story of how we are building Grid, the Guardian’s new image management system, working very closely with our editorial colleagues and using a modern technology stack. Oh, and it’s all Open Source. For about a year, a small dedicated team has been building the Guardian’s new image management service. To deliver it, the team relied on a pragmatic Agile approach, working directly with users to quickly develop a product that fits their needs and expectations. The new service is now integrated with our print workflow and used for almost half of the images published in our digital content. As the wider Editorial Tools teams worked on building a modern suite of editorial products, from content authoring and workflow management to editing of front and section pages, the need for a rich source of media became increasingly pressing.
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Aves Gallery
Aves can handle all sorts of images and videos, including your typical JPEGs and MP4s, but also more exotic things like multi-page TIFFs, SVGs, old AVIs, and more! It scans your media collection to identify motion photos, panoramas (aka photo spheres), 360° videos, as well as GeoTIFF files. Navigation and search is an important parts of Aves. The goal is for users to easily flow from albums to photos to tags to maps, etc. Aves integrates with Android (from API 19 to 33, i.e. from KitKat to Android 13) with features such as widgets, app shortcuts, screen saver, and global search handling. It also works as a media viewer and picker. The app only accesses media files, and modifying them requires explicit access grants from the user. Necessary to display the media coordinates, and to group them by country (via reverse geocoding). Checking for connection states allows Aves to gracefully degrade features that depend on the internet.
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