
- #NEOFINDER DATABASE SEARCH FROM ANOTHER COMPUTER FULL VERSION#
- #NEOFINDER DATABASE SEARCH FROM ANOTHER COMPUTER ARCHIVE#
- #NEOFINDER DATABASE SEARCH FROM ANOTHER COMPUTER CODE#
- #NEOFINDER DATABASE SEARCH FROM ANOTHER COMPUTER TRIAL#
I was planning to do a text filelist.disk# version so you can just grep what's needed. I'll be happy with anything weebotech puts together. A windows client for viewing the data would be fine. I would want a automated linux process that fills the database. It can tracks the growth and change of your data. Most tempting if I had to spurge out (well over kill for me) is spaceobserver by Jam-soft (the maker of treesize).
#NEOFINDER DATABASE SEARCH FROM ANOTHER COMPUTER CODE#
It's a work in progress, then I'll make an addon package and post it to my google code page. We need to package all these addons to unraid that smart people have put together and put them into a repository or knowledge. 1 is always live, and there are 2 offsite backups, (essentially clones of the live box that rotate in and out and get updated by rsync).ĭo you have the complete scripts to share? I would see great benefit to implementing this to my system too. I am all about getting more integrity to my systems. The script segment can be re-written to list all files on all drives. Or if there is corruption, you can see what is missing.Įventually I will make md5sums of the list so I can check for issues such as bit rot and to double check unraid's integrity. This way in a pinch, if you do loose a drive due to some unforseen circumstance, you can have a list read of what you had. Out of curiosity, does it download video and allow keywording? I suspect I'll find out but thanks.The 'list' is created once a month for each drive.
#NEOFINDER DATABASE SEARCH FROM ANOTHER COMPUTER TRIAL#
I think I will download the trial version and experiment. I forgot to mention that I'm working on a Mac platform so that is good that you have had positive experience with it. On the contrary they've always been proactive at squashing bugs and adding requested features in their 'dot' updates. So you won't be spending money each year on a new version release, but it also doesn't mean they don't do anything to their current version software. FWIW, I'm still using Photo Mechanic version 5, which was released around 2012. Photo Mechanic is pricier, at $140, also only a one-time purchase for installation on up to three computers. For that I use Photo Mechanic, which I 'grew up with' in the newsroom environment and find to be quite powerful for this specific application. I don't use it for captioning or keywording, though it can do that too.

I should clarify that my primary use of NeoFinder is to find photos/folders and to confirm a given photo/folder exists in multiple locations for redundancy. You can also customize the range of catalogs it searches to speed this up further. Scanning for a file name or folder name across ~100 catalogs usually takes a few seconds (on a SSD drive).

#NEOFINDER DATABASE SEARCH FROM ANOTHER COMPUTER ARCHIVE#
For a 'normal' image archive of 10s of thousands, or maybe a few hundred thousand images, you could set it to generate larger size previews. In my case, multiply that by 100 (but not all are 2GB databases) and it quickly adds up. Doing so, 4TB drives with 200-300K files/photos on them still result in a ~2GB database file. For example, because I have so many drives, I usually have NeoFinder generate a very small preview image to save storage space. It also means you can tailor catalog settings for each HDD/database in the archive. I like this because if one database corrupts, it doesn't take down everything with it. It makes a separate database for each HDD in the catalog. The personal license allows installation on up to three computers. going from version 6 to 7, but not from 7.1 to 7.2).
#NEOFINDER DATABASE SEARCH FROM ANOTHER COMPUTER FULL VERSION#
Maybe not as slick looking as LR, but no complaints from me for its $40 one-time purchase (though you do pay for upgrades to full version releases - i.e. The Windows version is available as abeMeda. I literally have over the past 15+ years more than 100 HDDs and have cataloged them all with NeoFinder. I like the program but is there a better alternative, particularly one that does not require a subscription to keep using? I currently use LR for keywording/cataloging images.

Best Lightroom alternative for cataloging images?.
