HISTARCH Archives

HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY

HISTARCH@COMMUNITY.LSOFT.COM

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Condense Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Sender:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 8 Jan 2003 20:13:49 +0200
MIME-version:
1.0
Reply-To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Content-type:
text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-7
Subject:
From:
In-Reply-To:
Content-transfer-encoding:
8bit
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (64 lines)
FREEWARE FotoArchive 2.5.1 for ArtHistorians/Historians/Archaeologists

[This is not a promo. It's news on FREEWARE software made by a scholar of the
humanities for the benefit of the world community of historians of art,
historians, and archaeologists who use digital images in teaching and research.]

FotoArchive is FREEWARE

In 1996 I began collecting digital images to be used in a web page for my
survey of western civilization course. The collection was stored on a zip drive
but I noticed that every time I saved images on the zip, my image viewer used
more and more space of my hard disk drive to store thumbnails of my images. My
frustration with image viewers increased when I found out that I could not use
notes for my images although in one of the viewers I used I could create sticky-
type notes, which covered part of the image though. Still another problem was
that I could not view on the screen two different collections at the same time.
As I was fully acquainted with programming, I began exploring object-oriented
WINDOWS programming and in late 1998 I produced the first PC version of
FotoArchive software.

With FotoArchive latest version, you can catalog your digital images by
dividing them into albums and storing them ideally on a CD-RW, CD-ROM or
Zip/Super disk. Although you may view your images in a thumbnail form, no
thumbnails are saved and no hard disk is used. You can view your images one by
one as a whole or in parts with the use of scrollbars, if they exceed the size
of a 800x600 screen resolution. You may drag and drop the images directly from
FotoArchive to Word or any other OLE2 computer program. You may view as many
albums as your computer memory permits at the same time side by side and
transfer images from one to another. You can write three different sets of
notes for each one of the images, i.e. Category, Title, Notes, without
affecting the image itself, and view them side by side with the images. You can
print one, some, or all of your images along with (or without) the notes. You
can search, manipulate, and feed to image editors your images in a number of
ways. You will find all software capabilities described on the on line help or
the manual. I now use FotoArchive a lot to catalog pictures I take with my
digital camera and store on CD-RW disks.

FotoArchive can run under Windows95/98/Me/NT4.0/2000/XP and above even on 486
Laptops with 8MB of memory although ideally you will use a Pentium based PC
with 128MB of memory. FotoArchive will use only 2.6MBs of hard disk and can be
installed and uninstalled easily on any laptop and desktop PC.

The experts at the Tucows organization rated FotoArchive as excellent software
(5/5 cows). According to Tucows statistics, more than 9,000 individuals have
downloaded and used FotoArchive since January 2001.


FotoArchive is available for downloading at:
1. The Tucows sites
        USA URL:        http://www.tucows.com/business/preview/198387.html
        Europe URL:     http://www.tucows.gr/business/preview/198387.html

2. FotoArchive home page
      http://users.hol.gr/~dilos/anistor/software/fotoarchive.htm

FotoArchive is FREEWARE, made, maintained, and distributed by a scholar freely
to other scholars or non-commercial users.

I would appreciate it if you sent me your comments, questions, and suggestions
on the application and how you use it.

D. I. Loizos
History Professor, Library Archaeologist

ATOM RSS1 RSS2