Mar

06

Black Macbooks

posted in MacBooks, by BindApple

Up on your wall, directly on the small table in the living room and mailboxes or by e -mail to your friends. Do more with your pictures than what you have ever thought of being possible. And do everything in one place: iPhoto. Organize your photos by whom, where and when they have been taken. iPhoto gives you three ways in which you can organize and manage thousands (or tens of thousands) of photos on your iMac.

They are called Faces, Places and Events and have an almost magical effect on your photo collection. The Faces feature helps you organize your photo collection according to who has made the photosg. It even detects and automatically recognizes the faces in your photos. iPhoto uses Face Detection to identify pictures where people are photographed. Then, recognizing faces, traces correspondences between similar faces. Thus, it is easy to add a name to your shots.



And you can easily find the people you're looking for. If you click on the Faces view will display a billboard with a snapshot for each person to whom you have assigned a name. iPhoto suggests a number of possible matches, which you can confirm by clicking. Find new people in your photos, which have not yet been assigned names. After you have assigned name to faces and vice versa, it synchronizes your device and you can take them with you.



May you never wake up asking yourself: "Where did I make this picture?" The iPhoto feature allows you to search and organize photos accordign to the place where they were made using data from GPS or any room on any iPhone. Do you have such a room or iPhone? You can use the feature by adding Places where it was taken: just start typing and your iPhoto immediately proposes a list of places to choose from. Including such attractions as the Eiffel Tower or Empire State Building. Also, iPhoto uses reverse geocoding to convert a photo of the location data, such as latitude and longitude of the place. Do you want to add seats for more photos? Select an event, an album or group of photos taken at the same place, and iPhoto can add location information to all the photos at the same time.



iPhoto automatically organizes your photos by events, not to doubt whether a particular photo in your friend is celebrating a birthday . When you connect your camera or insert the SD card, iPhoto grouped pictures depending on the day they were made. Both the amateur enthusiast and the professional will breathe a sigh of relief while making photos. If you want, you can merge several events in one. You just need to drag to move an event over another one and fuse them. And you can assign each event a meaningful name such as "Oana's Wedding" or "Andrew's graduation party, so you can easily find what you are looking for. Find and organize photos with people from your iPhoto collection function Faces.

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