With Places, you can simply type in the name of a landmark and Google Maps will usually find it. It does a decent job, but it’s not perfect (neither is iPhoto), but you can simply drag and drop the pics it misses. Once you name a person, Picasa creates a new album for that person and adds photos it thinks includes him or her (it can also sync people with your Google contacts). It does this a little too well, detecting strangers in a crowd, statues, and other random items, which I ignored. People works a bit differently than Faces, as it automatically starts detecting “people” from the photos it finds, placing them in an “Unnamed” album in the People section, which is sandwiched between the Albums and Folders sections in the left column. In the Picasa world, People and Places stand in for iPhoto’s Faces and Places features. It’s a good way to organize your favorites. Albums work kind of like iTunes playlists, letting you group together photos any way you want without moving the actual photos. Any organizational changes you make affect your actual files, so if you move a photo from one folder to another in Picasa, it moves the corresponding file on your Mac accordingly, and vice-versa.įor better organization, you can create Albums, which appear in the eponymously named section above the Folders at the top of the left column. Unlike iPhoto, you can drag and drop thumbnails within any folder-or to a different folder-to rearrange at whim. Like iPhoto, you can double-click any thumbnail to get a bigger view. Picasa displays all folders that contain images in the Folders section in the left column, organized according to your existing folder array and year all images contained within a selection appear in the main pane on the right.
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