Google Photos Select All And PATCHED Download

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Edilio Jetlife

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Jan 25, 2024, 11:32:13 AM1/25/24
to neulisdiffpers

Something mostly unrelated but maybe worth adding is that the photos in an album are sorted backwards on iNat. Most recent to oldest, whereas the default sorting method for apple photos is oldest to newest. A way to switch between those two sorting methods when uploading would also be nice

Are they really photos of actual wayspots? Is one of them the photo disc photo? Are they a mix of supporting photos and disc photos? Is Niantic trying to find people who aren't paying attention? It's so poorly set up and I don't see their point since without feedback my answers aren't helping me get better. I'm confused.

google photos select all and download


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Much of what I'm seeing have none that fit disc photo criteria because we can barely read the name on buildings to prove they are what the information says they are. We are given these photos to choose from with no map that may show a name and no supporting information.

There are times when I get "choose the best location" which I understand are players suggesting location edits... BUT sometimes the photos are so poor that you have to think "the supporting information must have been good since the photo itself is terrible."

Photo reviews are photos of suggested photo additions, along with those the system adds one current photo. You are not meant to know which one is the current photo. You are supposed to vote based on the guidelines. The guidelines are linked in each photo review.

I always leave any photo that meets criteria and shows the object. Only photos that are so bad that the POI can't be identified, or which violate standards by showing faces, license plates, submitter personal objects, etc. get rejected. There may be a lot of lower-quality photos and only a few good ones, but the community can upvote their favorite as needed - that's not the judgement we're making in these edits.

Think of it this way - there are a few waypoints around here that display their original photos, including some where the submitter has since passed away. Cell phone photo capabilities have come a long way since user submissions were first accepted, so those may not be the crispest, highest-resolution photos in the list - but they're still valid according to photo criteria. Rejecting photos with minor quality issues makes them go away forever. Letting them stand is the best course of action. There might be a story behind those imperfect photos!

Yep, I was just trying to illustrate the fact that even the imperfect photos might have a great story attached and should not be rejected unless they clearly would not have passed if they were the original one on the nomination. Pitch black, blurry to the point of being incomprehensible, containing identifying information....yes, reject. Slightly tilted, has a bit of sun glare, taken at night (but still visible), not high-res: give 'em a break. Sometimes people don't have the greatest of phones, either, but one shouldn't need a $1k phone to get an acceptable photo added.

It's very common for all of the photos to meet the criteria, and it's perfectly OK to mark them as such. It's also far too common to get photos that just blatantly fail the criteria, like screenshots of games, photos of people, and other ridonculous things. I've seen a few recently that are screenshots of the existing wayspot.

Just pick the photos that you know are the best ones. Normally POI have many photos attached to them; therefore you can select the real photos of the POI in question. If they are obviously incorrect photos those are the ones we are looking for to

One of the biggest changes is the Distill feature. Basically, Narrative Select will take the information it has gathered about your images and narrow down your selection for you. You can choose the strength of sorting to have control over the number of images you are left with. The higher the strength, the pickier the program is.

There are many, many keepers that aren't necessarily tack sharp in focus. I mean, that's probably 3 or 4 criteria down the list when I'm culling. There are many great photos out there; many of them on the covers of magazines, that are out of focus to some degree.

Select a group of adjacent photos: Click the first photo, then press the Shift key while you click the last photo. You can also press the Shift key while you press the arrow keys, or drag a selection rectangle around the photos.

I've added this :not([aria-label*="Select all"]), as I suspect that the Select All is also being clicked, which unselects the images.I've also added :not([aria-checked="true"]), so it doesn't uncheck images.

I was looking to download all my Google photos that contained images from 2016 to today. While the code from here helped, it was tedious to paste it over and over in the console. So below is the code on a loop with a timer to be copied nae pasted into the console. I added notes to help understand my thought process. (I'm sure it can be more efficient, but it works.)

The Library module offers several view modes that let you see your photos in different sizes and easily compare them. Switch between views using the keyboard shortcuts indicated, and see Switching between Grid, Loupe, Compare, and Survey views for more detail.

Grid view displays photos as thumbnails in cells, which can be viewed in compact and expanded sizes. The Grid view gives you an overview of your entire catalog or specific groups of photos for rotating, sorting, organizing, and managing.

Displays the active photo with selected photos so that you can evaluate them. The active photo has the lightest colored cell. Change the active photo by clicking a different thumbnail, and deselect a photo in Survey view by clicking the X in the lower-right corner of the thumbnail. (See step 2 for more about active and selected photos.)

The Folders and Collections panels on the left side of the Library module let you select specific folders or collections to display. Use them to navigate and manage the folders that contain your photos and to view collections of photos.

Click any photo in the Filmstrip or in the preview area to select it. You can select one or more photos using common selection commands: Shift-click to select photos in a sequence in Grid view, for example, and Ctrl-click (Windows) or Command-click (Mac OS) to select nonsequential images.

When you select a photo, it becomes the active photo. You can select multiple photos, but only one photo at a time is the active photo. Selected photos are indicated in the grid and the Filmstrip by a thin border around the thumbnail and a lighter-gray cell than deselected photos. The lightest colored cell indicates the active photo. See Select photos in the Grid view and the Filmstrip.

When you have hundreds or thousands of photos, locating a specific image might not be as easy as simply selecting a folder or a collection. Luckily, the Library Filter bar at the top of the Grid view can help. The Library Filter bar lets you find photos by various types of metadata: keyword, rating, color label, and more.

Collections are one of the basic ways to organize photos in Lightroom Classic. Collections group photos in one place for easy viewing or for performing different tasks. For example, photos in a collection can be assembled into a slideshow or used to create a photo book. Collections are listed in the Collections panel of every module, so they can be selected anytime you need them. See Work with photo collections.

Another organizational tool in Lightroom Classic is stacking. Stacking is a way to group a set of visually similar photos together, making them easy to manage. Stacks are useful for keeping multiple photos of the same subject or a photo and its virtual copies in one place. Stacks also reduce clutter in the Grid view and the Filmstrip. See Group photos into stacks.

Keywords are text metadata that describe the important contents of a photo. You tag photos with keywords using the Rewording and Keyword Lists panels. For example, select a photo in the Grid view, and in the text entry box in the Keywording panel, enter words separated by commas. You can also apply keyword sets or apply keywords using the Painter tool. See Use keywords.

The Quick Develop panel lets you quickly apply tone adjustments to photos. The tone adjustments in the Quick Develop panel in the Library module are the same as their counterparts in the Develop module. However, the Develop module has more precise controls for editing images. See Use the Quick Develop panel.

However, I would prefer to select individual pages within an item and/or list for this mass editing, as opposed to the entire item and/or list. Some days I pull 2000+ photos from an archive, and I seem to have rotated my cell phone camera at random intervals. Half are turned one direction, and then half in another (on a good day, more often than not I rotate every 40 or so pages). This mean that in one document, I could have things turned in all four directions. Thus, it would be easier to use a shift or ctl + click function within items and lists.

I don't understand how catalog works in lightroom or capture one. Maybe there is a way to plug my sd card and already make a selection inside the software that would automatically save my raws "keepers" in a catalog in one ssd, then i would just need to export my processed jpeg in the second ssd ?

Immediately behind the culling pass I do a keyword pass to at least keyword groups of like photos, shoots, subjects, places, etc.. I may make a second pass at keywords for finer details at the time or later.

Selecting and deleting photos is known as culling. To do that quickly and easily if I shoot both jpg and raw, I load both versions into one folder on my internal drive. Then I don't use software that can rate the pictures using a scale of 1-5 (or whatever). For me that would take much too long trying to decide.

Instead I use Faststone Image Viewer and use Faststone's tagging that marks pictures with a small red square. Viewing the jpg photos full screen, I decide only keep or delete. For the ones to delete, I tag both the jpg and raw with the red square. After going through all of the photos, I then use Faststone to view "tagged images only" and delete all of them.

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