Photo Mechanic
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Photo Mechanic | |
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Developer: | Camera Bits |
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Latest release: | 4.4.3.3 / 2006-09-23 |
OS: | Mac OS X, Windows |
Use: | image browser |
Website: | Camera Bits web site |
Photo Mechanic is a front-end photo browsing tool by Portland, Oregon-based company Camera Bits. Retailing at approximately $150, it is targeted for the professional photographer market.
While Photo Mechanic has basic support for trivial image edits, such as crops, it is meant to be used in concert with a dedicated photo editing program, such as Adobe Photoshop, and a back-end cataloging tool, such as iView Media Pro or Extensis Portfolio. The main goal of Photo Mechanic is to allow the photographer to quickly accomplish the initial capture of photos from his or her camera, to categorize photos into winners and losers, and to quickly and easily tag each photo with IPTC metadata.
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[edit] Software features
[edit] Browsing
Photo Mechanic is designed to support fast photo browsing and full color management. It is widely accepted among certain types of professional photographers as being the fastest tool for browsing and sorting files.
[edit] Categorizing
Photo Mechanic lets the photographer apply a "color class" to each photo with a single keystroke. This can be used later to filter photos by quality. One common complaint is that this differs from the "0 to 5 star" system used by a number of other browsers and photo tools, notably Adobe Bridge.
[edit] Metadata Tagging
Photo Mechanic uses the concept of "IPTC Stationery." The user sets up a piece of "stationery" with the tags common to a group of photos, and can then apply them to any arbitrary set of photos. Many browsers and catalog tools allow users to apply metadata to photos; Photo Mechanic is distinguished by two attributes. First, the user interface is designed to make applying tags to large numbers of photos at once very easy. Secondly, Photo Mechanic can write IPTC metadata to an extremely large number of file formats. This includes proprietary formats such as Canon CR2 or Nikon NEF. Other keywording solutions typically cannot write keywords directly to the RAW file, but instead create a "sidecar" XMP file. Photo Mechanic actually embeds the keywords in the RAW file itself.
[edit] References
↑ Luminous Landscape review of Photo Mechanic - "More than anything else PM is the world champion for speed when it comes to viewing and sorting files, including virtually every type of raw file....There is almost a cult following of PM among photojournalists and stock photographers."