If you’ve got a large but disorganised digital photo library on you PC,
Photology aims to help you quickly hunt down specific photos using a variety of
search criteria.
Once
Photology
has scanned your photos (you can specify which folders it should look in) you
can use up to seven different criteria to search for photos: Time of day, Date,
Features, Location, Content, Text and Colour.
The Content option is one of the most interesting as it lets you search for
photos containing people, ones taken at the beach, photos of flowers, sunsets
and more.
You can also search using a combination of different criteria, for example
it’s possible to hunt for photos of people with flowers or, alternatively, ones
of plants taken indoors.
Other features include simple adjustments, such as red-eye removal, and the
ability to quickly convert images and upload them to the web.
We tested Photology on a hard drive packed with photos and, as expected, the
results were by no means perfect. For example, although a search for photos with
water did indeed return some river and beach scenes, it also showed us a variety
of photos that contained a blue snooker table, some photos of the sky and even
some street shots - none of which had a drop of water in sight. It was a similar
story when we used other search criteria.
Photology certainly isn’t a breakthrough in image filtering technology, but
at this price you wouldn’t expect it to be. It offers a different way of
searching through your photos and, if you can accept irrelevant photos regularly
appearing in your searches, it does return plenty of matching results. However,
unless you’ve got heaps of unsorted photos you may prefer the old-fashioned
method of flicking through your snaps manually.
You can download a free
trial of Photology.
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