Goodbye F-Spot. Hello Shotwell.

I’ve finally found a photo manager for Linux I can live with, Shotwell. Shotwell is an photo manager for GNOME that I’ve been testing for a few months now but the recent 0.5 release which added tagging and printing, it means Shotwell is finally ready replace F-Spot on my workstation.

Shotwell is intuitive, well documented, extremely easy to use and reliable. It’s easy to dismiss Shotwell as an oversimplified photo manager. But once you start using it, you’ll quickly appreciate its clean interface and easy-to-use tools. Don’t just take my word for it either, Shotwell is now the default photo manager in Fedora 13 alpha. Here is a quick run down of the features.

Shotwell provides a non-destructive way to tweak your photos. Instead of modifying the original photos, Shotwell stores all edits in a database and applies them on-the-fly as necessary. This means that you can easily undo all edits. Shotwell comes equipped with all the usual photo enhancing tools and slideshow.

You can download a source tarball from the Shotwell home page at: http://www.yorba.org/shotwell/ or grab a binary for Ubuntu Karmic or Lucid via Yorba’s Launchpad PPA at: https://launchpad.net/~yorba/+archive/ppa

Posted on March 20, 2010 at 3:39 pm by Martin · Permalink
In: Linux · Tagged with: , ,

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