iPhoto is a hideous piece of software—I think the “i” stands for Irk Me. Tonight, it crashed on me while I was importing photos, and it erased the whole batch of 30 photos. That’s unforgivable behavior—crashing is bad enough, but deleting files before writing the new copies to disk safely is deplorable.
To recover them, I had to buy a piece of software that recovers photos from photo cards. I felt like it was 1991 all over again and I back was recovering term papers from corrupt floppy disks in the campus computer lab. But that’s not the only beef I have with iPhoto.
I recently had to increase the amount of RAM in my computer, not because of any of the other programs I run, hogs like Photoshop, Dreamweaver and Word. No, the problem was iPhoto, which seems incapable of handling a big photo library. It uses more RAM (even when idle) and runs slower than any other program on my computer.
My photo library is currently 13,000 photos. That’s fairly big, I admit that, but it’s not out-of-this-world big. The advice I’ve gotten to deal with iPhoto’s inability to handle my photos—take older photos and break them into separate libraries by year or something—is pretty much unacceptable.
Let’s say I want to find a nice picture of my sister to put on her birthday card. I don’t want to have to look through multiple libraries—it’s a pain in the butt. Or what about if I’m doing a slideshow of past Christmases? Or what if I just want random pictures on my screensaver, from my entire collection?
Frankly, I’m looking for a replacement and I’m open to suggestions.
In the mean time, not that Apple’s listening, but here are some things I’d like to see added to the next iPhoto:
1) Any title, keywords, description, rating, date or other data I add to a photo should be stored in the photo’s IPTC data. As it stands, if my iPhoto database goes sour—and I bet it will, given iPhoto’s flakiness—I will lose every bit of data I’ve typed in. For comaprison, with iTunes, data added via iTunes is also saved in each MP3 file, which means iTunes isn’t the single point of failure, and using those files in other programs is much easier, as an added bonus. Even works well with Spotlight.
2) Better keyword handling. As it exists right now, iPhoto’s keyword system is impossible to use. I’d like to be able to quickly add and remove keywords, without having to use some bizarre interface different, and more awkward than any other product out there. This is a version 5 product, why are the keywords basically unimproved since version 2?
3) Much better saving and rebuilding of the database. Many times, I’ve had iPhoto crash and I’ve lost titles and keywords, or editing I’ve done. Come on, Apple. That’s so lame.
“Watch your step as you exit the train, and if you’re late, just remember that life is a lot like being on this train: we may not be there yet, but we’re getting there.”
“According to Golf Digest, from 1996 to 2007, Woods made $769,440,709. Golf Digest predicts that, by 2010, Woods will become the world’s first athlete to pass one billion dollars in earnings.”
Please say it louder and over and over until Apple listens. I hate iPhoto so much that I've abandoned it altogether. I shamelessly admit that the crap software that came with my Canon is my current photo management deal. It's not the bees knees and wouldn't be my recommendation.
I did contact Apple to ask about how I unselect iPhoto as my default. No response. So if you know please please let me know. Everytime I connect my camera iPhoto opens and I curse, close it and open the Canon CameraWindow. Blah.
To disable iPhoto when connecting your camera go to ... Image Capture. Change the preferences there to some other program.
No, you're not crazy, it's completely unintuitive and dumb.
Posted by Travis Smith at 10:07 pm on Nov. 8, 2005
hi travis
i lost my photo library too.
are you saying that even tho i selected not to save the images on my camera (after i downloaded them to iphoto) that they can be recovered?
Posted by ramona at 9:52 pm on Aug. 18, 2006
Two things:
1) Even if iPhoto didn't catalog your photos, they might still have been downloaded to your disk, check that first.
2) Even if iPhoto Deleted your card's copy of the photos, usually it accomplishes that by just deleting the index file -- kind of like throwing away the card catalog but leaving the books on the shelf. If you haven't taken any (or very few) more pictures, some recovery programs can rescan every bit of your photo card and recover some or even all of the photos you took.
Posted by Travis Smith at 12:05 am on Aug. 19, 2006
You can scroll right easily by holding down the SHIFT key and using your scroll wheel. (Firefox users trying this will end up jumping to old Web pages until a) Firefox releases a fix, b) they change their settings like so.)