• 4 Posts
  • 58 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 7th, 2023

help-circle










  • Can you share the software you went to use? Maybe there’s a good Linux alternative or someone knows how to get it working in wine.

    These are all paid programs that don’t have viable alternatives and/or I actually need to use them.

    A few off the top of my head:

    • Excire Foto
    • Jpegmini Pro
    • Garmin Basecamp
    • Garmin Express
    • several paid video editing/photo editing apps; I’ve tried alternatives, but they aren’t nearly as intuitive.
    • Reolink camera software.
    • ACP Ups software.

    I do my best to find alternatives to other software, and prefer to use self-hosted solutions, but the ones above aren’t really easy to replace, so I’d rather just run them in a VM.

    I’ve use VMs in windows to run Linux, so I’m aware of the performance hit and possible startup times (but I use snapshots for quick access). I’m not too concerned about that for any of these programs, since I’m only using them from time-to-time.





  • I went through the same dilemma. The old Synology photo software had a duplicate finder, but they removed that feature with the “new” version. But even with the duplicate finder, it wasn’t very powerful and offered no adjustability.

    In the end, I ended up paying for a program called “Excire Foto”, which can pull images from my NAS, and can not only find duplicates in a customized and accurate way. It also has a localAI search that bests even Google Photos.

    It runs from windows, saves its own database, and can be used as read-only, if you only want to make use of the search feature.

    To me, it was worth the investment.

    Side note: if I only had <50,000 photos, then I’d probably find a free/cheaper way to do it. At the time, I had over 150,000 images, going back to when the first digital cameras were available + hundreds of scanned negatives and traditional (film) photos, so I really didn’t want to spend weeks sorting it all out!

    Oh, the software can even tag your photos for subjects so that it’s baked into the EXIF data (so other programs can make use of it).







  • Well, I think my experiment might have come to an early end.

    Yesterday, when I booted up fedora, I lost my wifi (like, it didn’t even give me the option to use wifi). Re-booted and it worked again.

    Then I decided to get a copy of Fedora with KDE Plasma loaded up. Seemed fine, started setting it up.

    Let’s try some Windows software through Wine (Bottles, I believe, is what the actual software was called). Program 1, installed, but won’t run. Program 2, installed, but wont’ run…

    Then, out of nowhere: Blank screen.

    After waiting several minutes, I hit the power button: FAILED FAILED FAILED messages “Failed to start plymouth-reboot.services” being the last. FFS…

    I just don’t understand how I can break Linux so quickly without really doing anything. My experience over the last 20 years of trying Linux has always ended the same. Are there no stable distros available? Ubuntu, Mint, Fedora, Elementary, Damn Small… none of them last more than a few days/weeks before they crash and burn.

    And when Linux crashes and burns, I really don’t know how to fix it.

    It’s extremely hard to go from Windows 11, which has been absolutely rock solid. Literally no problems, no crashes, no BSOD, no compatibility issues, etc. to Linux, even though I value Linux more.

    I would rather not use Windows, but I feel like I’m forced to at this point.