Joho the Blog » On the road, looking for photos
EverydayChaos
Everyday Chaos
Too Big to Know
Too Big to Know
Cluetrain 10th Anniversary edition
Cluetrain 10th Anniversary
Everything Is Miscellaneous
Everything Is Miscellaneous
Small Pieces cover
Small Pieces Loosely Joined
Cluetrain cover
Cluetrain Manifesto
My face
Speaker info
Who am I? (Blog Disclosure Form) Copy this link as RSS address Atom Feed

On the road, looking for photos

I’ll be on the road through Wednesday, researching an article for Wired on how we end-users are going to find the snapshots we’re looking for when we each have 25,000+ photos on our desktops.

I’m leaving tonight to visit Corbis on Monday. They have a few million photos, so they’ve given this issue some thought. I’m particularly interested in how they create and manage the taxonomies and other metadata.

Then, after traveling all day Tuesday, I’ll spend most of Wednesday in the Iron Mountain hole in the ground where Corbis stores its prints and negatives.

The article is not about Corbis, though. Corbis, I hope, will give a way into some of the issues. I’ve already spoken with a bunch o’ folks about what’s going on in this field. If you know of someone I should talk with about how we’re going to manage the oceans of digital photos we’ll be storing, let me know…

Previous: « || Next: »

8 Responses to “On the road, looking for photos”

  1. Facial recognition and item/place recognition based on previously defined images as master references.

    Add in date based coordination to calendars of vacation or trip events.

    It’s all about auto-generation of metadata.

  2. I haven’t been in touch with anyone there recently, but you might want to talk to the folks at The Workbook, my old employers. They’re the small guys in the field who don’t have Corbis and Getty’s resources. You probably want to talk to Doug Dawirs, and his contact info can be found here. Tell ’em I said hi.

  3. You just need to organize them by colour!

  4. In camera GPS, now you’re talking.

  5. The Ubiquity Of Photographs

    It used to be the case that only the most prestigious of events were captured in photographs, such was the scarcity of the technology required. Today you can pick up cameras for pocket money and digital cameras enable a freedom…

  6. Good question…

    David Weinberger is asking what are going to do about the amount of digital images we are taking and storing on our desktops. Good questions, I hope he finds some answers!

  7. Did you consider Microsoft Research’s MyLifeBits? Photos are a subset of the information being archived/organized in this project.

  8. Bernhard, yes, I’ve been talking with Microsoft to set up an interview about MyLifeBits and other research they have underway. Thanks for the tip, though.

Leave a Reply

Comments (RSS).  RSS icon