The document discusses setting up online photo sharing and outlines several needs and considerations: needing a website that is up to date, a renovated club gallery, managing and controlling photos easily, getting feedback anytime rather than just at meetings, and finding a cheap or free option since photo sharing sites seem risky and coding a solution would take too much time. It also provides tips on using Flickr groups and uploading photos.
69. Manage our own photos
easily
Control the rights easily
Give and get feedback any
time, not just at meetings
Cheap or free
Photo by Esthr - http://flic.kr/p/E8gV
Hinweis der Redaktion
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We have a nice web site, but the gallery is quite sparse and it needs updating.\n
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Web sites are great as billboards telling the world who we are, where and when we meet.\n
There is a separate need we have for a gallery, though, which can be met with a solution that supports our club’s activities.\n
What would we want from a gallery that supports club’s online activities?\n
What would we want from a gallery that supports club’s online activities?\n
What would we want from a gallery that supports club’s online activities?\n
What would we want from a gallery that supports club’s online activities?\n
I faced a similar dilemma with my own online photo sharing needs.\n
I faced a similar dilemma with my own online photo sharing needs.\n
I faced a similar dilemma with my own online photo sharing needs.\n
I tried using a solution that ran right on my own web site. I had the technical expertise, but it wasn’t an elegant solution.\n
I tried using a solution that ran right on my own web site. I had the technical expertise, but it wasn’t an elegant solution.\n
I tried using a solution that ran right on my own web site. I had the technical expertise, but it wasn’t an elegant solution.\n
I tried using a solution that ran right on my own web site. I had the technical expertise, but it wasn’t an elegant solution.\n
I realized that I was trying to reinvent the wheel. There are sites out there that do what I need and do it well.\n
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If you have more than 200 photos, the annual cost is $25. This also removes ads.\n
If you have more than 200 photos, the annual cost is $25. This also removes ads.\n
If you have more than 200 photos, the annual cost is $25. This also removes ads.\n
If you have more than 200 photos, the annual cost is $25. This also removes ads.\n
flickr is that site that could help support our club’s activities, including those days in between meetings.\n
flickr groups are the meat of the service that would support our club\n
An example of an active group\n
Same group, lower half of the screen.\n
Our club’s group on flickr\n
All club members are moderators. Here’s how we can control what goes on and keeps this a happy, family-friendly space.\n
Group rules\n
Moderation settings\n
More moderation settings\n
Privacy settings\n
Let’s explore how we can participate in a flickr group\n
Adding photos\n
choose a photo to share\n
...and it gets added to the list on the right.\n
success!\n
An example of commenting on someone’s photo. Constructive comments and criticism is essential for growth as a photographer\n
Discussions\n
Replying to a discussion topic\n
the reply\n
If photos are geotagged, either by the camera, your software, or in flickr...\n
...you can see where they’ve been taken!\n
The photos you share come from your flickr page\n
My default home page in flickr\n
My photo sets, a great way to organize your photos\n
personal privacy settings\n
more privacy settings\n
a photo set\n
Well, how do we get photos into flickr?\n
It’s easy! Windows Photo Gallery, iPhoto, Aperture, Lightroom (with plugin), many smartphone apps, or flickr’s web interface\n
Our web site was a good start\n
Now, we can take our club to the next level and have online sharing of photos support our club’s activities\n