sometimes my cat feeds himself raw meat.
sometimes my cat feeds himself raw meat.
oh oh. One billionaire suggesting that his dick is larger than another billionaire?
“activitypub wordpress plugin” three words that don’t belong together . I want to blog on the fediverse, but i don’t want wordpress.
blah blah a broken clock
i can see already that it’s going to be 4 years of ‘complaining’. Already this morning trump has been “slammed”, “burned”, and “blasted” by various government officials and office holders.
I think I’ll just not read any news for 4 years.
That’s an orthorexic statement. Cats need to eat what they’ve been eating for 3 million years.
Relying on a file system to hold meta-data about images is bad practice. Never use file names, folder structure, or folder names to be the sole carrier of information. Image files themselves hold meta data, and it is best to make use of it. That way, your image files are truly portable, and contain everything that might need to be known if they become divorced from the file system.
In the past, a convention was to tag images with keywords. This was a tedious process and many photographers spent months and years carefully keywording and hierarchically organising keywords in order to feel that they could retrieve whatever they wanted with a simple search.
In reality, for all those years spent keywording, few photographers leveraged the keywords. In other words, they maybe spent a year doing complex keywording and never recouped that time with future searches, because after all that work, they only ever did a few searches. (“every image with me and a flower in it”). Fortunately with AI now, it doesnt matter, there is little need to spend time keywording. And as AI automatic tagging gets better, keywords will be needed less.
For “snapshots” adding brief descriptions to the meta data is good practice, especially if the images are historic, personal, genealogical, or informational. Descriptions should follow a consistent brief template, such as one phrase for each of : what-who, where, when, physical context. For example:
Martha [Hayes] Brown and Alice [Tate] Cook celebrating their birthdays on a boat. East River near Coentes Slip. Taken by Ron Brown June 3 2014..
You might argue that the date is not necessary as it should be in the exif date tag, but it’s good to have it in the description/caption as well; some web applications only show the caption. For scanned photographs, add physical context: ie:
Martha [Hayes] Brown and Alice [Tate] Cook celebrating their birthdays on a boat. East River near Coentes Slip. Taken by Ron Brown June 3 1927. Scanned 8x12 print stamped with Hansen Photography watermark. Hand annotated on reverse: “Having Fun!” in Ron Brown’s hand.
It is important not to over-tag: for a simple image of a flower, you might simply want the name of the flower unless there is some reason viewer need to know where that flower is. Other exif data will have that information.
I just made my cat a garden salad with lettuce, cucumber, rocket, kale, and snow peas. he’s not eating it. What’s wrong?
Sorry im not from the US… what is a “wazoo”?
Was about to pay for proton. Not now
I don’t know. Pictures of people’s dog and what they’re eating for lunch. It’s like subscribing to getty images.
You mean that?
Conservatives don’t understand those concepts
Maga cunt
Carrie full on maga. Imbecile.
Teach them what?
Some 15 year old kid in LA excited he got a drone for xmas is shitting his pant laying low.
The shareholders are quite pleased with their returns